Australia's $10,000 Student Debt Relief Plan: How the 20% Cut Affects Your HECS
Prime Minister reports "warm and positive" conversation with US President amid ongoing diplomatic focus on Asian region
In a game-changing move for Australia's debt-burdened graduates, the re-elected Labor government has prioritized slashing student HECS debts by 20% while raising the income threshold for repayments. The PM's top post-election priority focuses on cutting 20% from student debts, alongside increasing the minimum income threshold before graduates must begin repaying their loans. This relief package comes as welcome news for current students and recent graduates struggling with rapidly accumulating education costs in today's challenging economic landscape.
The Key Details:
The 20% cut benefits both current students and recent graduates trying to pay off debt while working, addressing a significant cost-of-living stress point
Some humanities students have accumulated debts "in the very, very high tens of thousands" due to the 2021 Job Ready Graduates Package that substantially increased humanities degree costs
For many students, this relief will mean they're "ten thousand dollars better off"
The National Union of Students is advocating for further reforms, including reversing the Job Ready Graduates Package which was designed to push students toward STEM degrees but "completely just failed"
The government is also reviewing degree pricing through a quality agency, with student advocates hoping to see humanities degree costs potentially reduced from $50,000 to around $30,000
Why It Matters
This debt reduction represents more than just financial relief—it signals a political acknowledgment of younger Australians' growing electoral influence.
As Ashlyn Horton, president of the National Union of Students, notes: "It's really just to me like the government is trying to say that they want us at the table because they've obviously seen that Gen Z and millennials now make up the largest voting block in the country, and they're bringing out policies that reflect that."
With the permanent implementation of fee-free TAFE and full public school funding already secured, this move suggests education affordability may remain a central policy focus throughout Labor's second term.
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