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|
States |
Estimated Operating Expenditure |
Est. Operating Expenditure per Resident Population |
||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Capital |
Regional Areas |
State/ |
Capital City |
Regional Areas |
State/ |
|
|
NSW |
1690.2 |
682.2 |
2372.3 |
435 |
294 |
382 |
|
Vic |
1709.0 |
300.6 |
2009.6 |
521 |
235 |
441 |
|
Qld |
785.0 |
385.8 |
1170.9 |
516 |
212 |
351 |
|
WA |
712.2 |
14.2 |
726.4 |
550 |
30 |
411 |
|
SA |
593.4 |
17.2 |
610.7 |
550 |
44 |
414 |
|
Tas |
95.0 |
66.7 |
161.7 |
485 |
239 |
341 |
|
NT |
50.9 |
9.2 |
60.1 |
619 |
92 |
331 |
|
ACT |
478.6 |
|
478.6 |
1554 |
|
1553 |
|
Australia |
6114.4 |
1475.9 |
7590.3 |
525 |
221 |
415 |
Sources: DETYA Higher Education Division, Regional Participation in Higher Education and the Distribution of Higher Education Resources across Regions, Occasional Paper Series, 99-B (1999); DETYA, Selected Higher Education Finance Statistics 1996 (November 1997); ABS, Australian Demographic Statistics, September Quarter 1998 (March 1999).
Table 2. Higher Education Student Places, 1996
|
States |
Higher Education Student Places |
Student Places per Resident Population |
||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Capital City |
Regional Areas |
State/ |
Capital City |
Regional Areas |
State/ |
|
|
NSW |
101146 |
49504 |
150650 |
26.1 |
21.3 |
24.3 |
|
Vic |
115473 |
23195 |
138668 |
35.2 |
18.2 |
30.4 |
|
Qld |
55277 |
29216 |
84493 |
36.4 |
16.1 |
25.3 |
|
WA |
45675 |
1086 |
46761 |
35.3 |
2.3 |
26.5 |
|
SA |
36904 |
995 |
37899 |
34.2 |
2.5 |
25.7 |
|
Tas |
6612 |
3968 |
10580 |
33.9 |
14.2 |
22.3 |
|
NT |
2894 |
574 |
3468 |
35.2 |
5.8 |
19.1 |
|
ACT |
15277 |
|
15277 |
49.6 |
|
49.6 |
|
Australia |
379258 |
108538 |
487796 |
32.6 |
16.3 |
26.6 |
Sources: see Table 1.
The distribution of higher education facilities is the product of a century of State, Commonwealth and institutional decisions. Most large regional campuses had their origin as small state colleges established between 1870 and 1950. Typically, these were vocational colleges that owed their existence to the political influence of prosperous local communities. Following the recommendations of the Martin Report (1964)(7) and the introduction of Commonwealth funding many colleges broadened their range of courses and became Colleges of Advanced Education (CAEs). These were statutory institutions with a degree of autonomy, but their time in the sun was brief. The financial constraints facing the Federal Government since the mid-1970s produced a constant pressure for institutional rationalisation. This came first with the Review of Commonwealth Functions (1981) and culminated in the introduction of the Unified National System (UNS) in 1989, which abolished the distinction between universities and CAEs. While this resulted in many regional campuses attaining university status, it was often at the expense of their local identity: they were now the offshoots of metropolitan institutions or part of larger regional multi-campus universities. It is interesting to note that at least five regional campuses attached to metropolitan universities now exceed the UNS minimum size criteria: Bendigo, Gippsland, Gold Coast, Gatton and Launceston.(8)
It is apparent from Table 2 that the provision of student places in the capitals is fairly consistent across the States, while there are wide variations in regional provision. This is partly the result of population distribution patterns: the regional population of WA, SA and the NT is very diffuse, with few provincial centres of any size outside of the capital cities. (9)Although there are some HEIs in very low population centres, these tend to be small, specialist colleges with a largely residential student body. It is not practical to construct higher education campuses offering generalist courses in centres much smaller than 25 000, unless they share facilities with other education institutions. Population centres of this size with little or no higher education facilities tend to be isolated communities with a low surrounding population (Alice Springs, Broken Hill, Mt Isa, Mt Gambier, Geraldton), or they are near other regional centres with campuses (the cities of the lower Hunter, Tweed Heads, Burnie-Devonport, Shoalhaven). Inland cities have also tended to be neglected in comparison to more fashionable coastal locations that are more attractive to overseas fee-paying students.(10)
The Commonwealth has sought to redress regional under-provision through the higher education Capital Development Pool, which emphasises new regional facilities and electronic delivery infrastructure projects. Funding for the Pool is around $39 million a year, or less than one per cent of total operating grants.(11) Since the capital roll-in (1994), the responsibility for capital management decisions has rested mainly with the institutions themselves.
Endnotes