Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors 
      
Submission 53
      National Tertiary Education Union
      Submission to the House of Representatives Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Training
      November 9 1997
       
      Recommendations
      Recommendation 1
      Governments should, as a matter of urgency, introduce 
        legislation designed to ensure the quality and accountability of private 
        tertiary education. In particular, the Commonwealth should move to amend 
        the Higher Education Funding Act to regulate the relationships between 
        institutions listed in the Act, on the one hand, and other public and 
        private institutions on the other, along the lines of the policy outlined 
        as Appendix B to this submission.
       
      Recommendation 2
      The following measures are recommended:
      
        (i) Provision of higher education by TAFE/VET institutions
        TAFE or other VET providers should not be eligible 
          for Commonwealth funding for the purposes of higher education provision 
          except where such providers are accredited and monitored through the 
          academic processes of an existing higher education institution which 
          is empowered by State or Federal statute to grant degrees. The degree-level 
          credentials offered by such providers should be credentials of the accrediting 
          institution.
        (ii) Credit transfer and articulation from VET to higher education
        The development and expansion of schemes linking VET 
          and higher education study by means of systematic, explicit credit transfer 
          and course articulation should be encouraged and facilitated by both 
          relevant levels of Government. Nevertheless, such schemes should be 
          regulated in order to ensure that educational quality and the principles 
          of access and equity are preserved, especially where commercially-based 
          (fee-paying) VET provision is involved. This regulation should be achieved 
          by amendment to the Higher Education Funding Act, and should, among 
          other things:
        
          - limit the proportion of a course leading to a higher education credential 
            which can be undertaken by study in courses leading normally to VET 
            credentials, offered either within or outside the higher education 
            sector by means of credit transfer and/or advanced standing arrangements;
- regulate course articulation arrangements between non-higher education 
            institutions and higher education institutions to ensure that the 
            VET components of such arrangements are appropriately accredited and 
            monitored by the normal academic processes of the relevant higher 
            education institution;
- ensure that such arrangements between VET and higher education providers 
            are accessible on a HECS-related or non-commercial (publicly funded) 
            basis at both levels, and are not limited, or predominantly limited, 
            to fee-paying students; 
- are appropriately resourced and funded.
Cross-sectoral developments should only occur in full consultation 
          with the relevant staff and student organisations, and with affected 
          and potentially affected general and teaching/academic staff.
        (iii) Articulation and credit transfer from higher education to 
          the VET sector
        As far as possible, credit transfer from higher education 
          to VET should be available in the form of explicitly established articulation 
          arrangements rather than on an ad hoc basis. The needs of individual 
          students, however, should also be accommodated wherever possible. Funding 
          for curriculum development and related costs should be available through 
          HEFA for such purposes.
      
 
      Recommendation 3
      In -order to develop a national approach to the provision of vocational 
        education and training, and to foster appropriate co-operative and joint 
        developments between VET and higher education, the Commonwealth should:
      
        (i) assume full responsibility for the funding and 
          co-ordination of the public TAFE system;
        (ii) develop a national accreditation system for all 
          VET provision, including consistent national standards for accountability, 
          educational quality and financial probity;
        (iii) devise and fund schemes designed to encourage and facilitate 
          intersectoral collaboration, joint projects and, where appropriate, 
          cross sectoral facilities and institutions.
      
 
      Recommendation 4
      The Commonwealth should encourage the development of 
        models for cross-sectoral collaboration which suit particular circumstances. 
        It should require institutions embarking upon such developments to do 
        so in full consultation with relevant unions and campus student organisations.
       
      Recommendation 5
      In the interests of stability, the maintenance of quality 
        and efficiency, the Commonwealth should not introduce a broadly-based 
        system of competitive tendering as the basic mechanism for public funding 
        in tertiary education. If an element of competition is to be introduced, 
        the policy should be implemented incrementally, should involve detailed 
        regulation of the market I and should initially be experimental and small 
        in scale.
       
      Recommendation 6
      Where economies of scale and other efficiencies can 
        be generated, the Commonwealth should provide financial and other 
        forms of encouragement for the development of joint VET-higher education 
        facilities and ventures in rural and regional Australia.
       
      Recommendation 7
      The Commonwealth should provide adequate funding for 
        the purchase, installation and associated staff development requirements 
        associated with new technology and other approaches to flexible teaching 
        and learning in public tertiary education. These funds should be available 
        on the basis of sound educational benefit and should include financial 
        assistance to ensure that students enjoy adequate access to such programs, 
        and facilities, regardless of personal means.
       
      Recommendation 8
      Cross-sectoral co-operation and joint developments should 
        be planned and implemented in full consultation with, and with regard 
        to the professional and industrial interests of, affected staff. This 
        consultation should take place under the auspices of the relevant unions.
       
      Recommendation 9
      The Government should exercise caution in the area of 
        student financing policy in VET. Before any decision is made to introduce 
        a deferred-payment option for fees in the VET sector, the Government should 
        commission a detailed review of existing arrangements which includes an 
        analysis of the potential effects of proposed changes to student financing 
        arrangements, including future rises in the levels of fees charged.
       
      SUBMISSION TO THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES COMMITTEE ON
      EMPLOYMENT, EDUCATION AND TRAINING INQUIRY INTO
      THE ROLE OF INSTITUTES OF TECHNICAL AND FURTHER EDUCATION
       
      1 Introduction
      The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) is the Union 
        which represents academic and general staff in universities and research 
        institutes and also, in Victoria, general staff in TAFE institutions. 
        The Union has coverage of several institutions in various states and territories 
        which are cross-sectoral or dual-sector in character, involved in the 
        provision of both higher education and vocational education and training 
        (VET). NTEU has approximately 25,000 members across Australia.
      NTEU is pleased to contribute to the House of Representatives 
        Committee Inquiry. In its submission, NTEU will attempt to reflect the 
        interests of both its TAFE and its higher education members. The Union 
        also has a broad policy interest in Australian tertiary education and 
        is an active participant in public debate and other aspects of the policy 
        process in this area. The submission is informed by this more general 
        perspective.
      The starting point for NTEU in considering the current 
        and ideal future role of TAFE institutions, and in particular their role 
        in the provision of higher education, is the issue of access for Australian 
        students to high-quality, publicly-funded tertiary education. The efficient 
        and equitable provision of both vocational and general education is, the 
        Union believes, a primary responsibility of Government, whether
      Federal or State. Thus the Union is committed to the 
        maintenance and strengthening of the public system of technical and further 
        education, and to the retention by Government of responsibility for planning, 
        funding and ensuring accountability of VET institutions. NTEU believes 
        that only by means of a strong, central role for Government will equity, 
        access and overall quality in tertiary education be achieved and maintained.
       
      2. Current sectoral roles in tertiary education
      Although the respective roles of various parts of the tertiary education 
        sector are becoming blurred in some areas and moving closer together in 
        others, there remains a clear delineation between the core functions of 
        higher education on the one hand, and vocational education and training 
        (as carried out by the VET sector) on the other. Essentially, the higher 
        education system (largely universities) provides degree-level and postgraduate 
        education in both professional/vocational and generalist disciplines, 
        and carries out research including fundamental or basic research. The 
        VET sector, on the other hand, provides vocational education and .training 
        leading to qualifications included within the Australian Qualifications 
        Framework (AQF), and also adult education. This training and education 
        provides credentials at Diploma and Certificate levels and below. TAFE 
        and some other VET institutions are also involved to some extent in some 
        secondary-level education provision.
      It is the implications of the role of universities in 
        research, however, which distinguish them most clearly from other tertiary 
        institutions. This role necessitates an international orientation in terms 
        of scholarship and communication. It also informs, and is in many respects 
        intrinsic to, their teaching function and activities. The links between 
        teaching and research in higher education are mutually essential and fundamental.
      Universities' roles in research, research training and 
        other postgraduate education have major implications for their resource 
        needs. These extend to libraries, computing facilities, communications, 
        laboratories and also to staff resources especially the time for academics 
        to undertake research and scholarly activities. Undergraduate degree teaching 
        also necessitates considerable resources in these areas. Thus the average 
        cost per student in higher education is considerably higher than the comparable 
        measure in the VET sector.
      While some public TAFE institutions are involved in research 
        and development, this involvement tends to be applied and practical in 
        nature, or else to be closely related to their pedagogical role - it is 
        often directly connected to curriculum development or other aspects of 
        their teaching and training functions. Teaching drives research. Private-sector 
        VET providers are far less likely to engage in research; rarely do VET 
        institutions engage in basic or fundamental research.
      Where the dividing line between VET and higher education has become blurred, 
        this has happened in structural and administrative aspects of their functions, 
        and also in the teaching role. The most common phenomena are:
      
        - credit transfer and articulation between VET and higher education, 
          whereby studies undertaken in one sector are recognised for some purposes 
          in the other 
- movement from higher education to VET, with credit; this traffic 
          has increased markedly in recent years and is actually much heavier 
          than movement in the opposite direction 
- the provision of Graduate Certificate and Diploma courses, in specific 
          vocational 
- areas, by VET 
- cross-sectoral institutions, variously structured and administered 
        
- the provision under licence by VET (usually TAFE) institutions of 
          parts of higher education courses, which occurs largely in regional 
          areas.
In addition, formal relationships and arrangements exist across the sectors 
        in the international education (education export) arena, and in other 
        co-operative developments involving the sharing of facilities and joint 
        projects.
       
      Scope of current cross-sectoral relationships
      Cross-sectoral arrangements and developments, however, 
        are limited in scope. They are restricted and encumbered by the sharply 
        differing funding mechanisms and sources applying to the respective sectors, 
        with higher education funded and coordinated at Commonwealth level and 
        VET on the other hand, administered principally by the States and Territories, 
        and funded by both levels of Government. The majority of VET's public 
        funding, though, emanates from the States. Funding formulae, mechanisms 
        and levels vary significantly between the sectors, as do industrial awards 
        and agreements. Reporting requirements and statistical collection methods 
        also differ substantially. Finally, while universities are exclusively 
        standalone, autonomous institutions vis a vis Government, this is not 
        yet true of publicly funded institutions in the VET sector. In some States, 
        notably Victoria, there have been moves to grant TAFE institutions considerable 
        independence but, even in that State, wages remain determined centrally, 
        and many industrial and policy matters are similarly handled.
       
      Cross-sectoral institutions
      Beyond credit transfer agreements and course articulation 
        between discrete institutions on either side of the existing sectoral 
        divide, cross-sectoral institutions which in various ways straddle this 
        divide - have for many years been a feature of the Australian post-secondary 
        education landscape. No single pattern or model for such developments, 
        however, dominates the scene. The institutions vary in the degree of structural 
        and financial integration, as well as educational or curriculum integration, 
        which they exhibit. There are examples of joint developments where campuses 
        are contiguously situated or co-located, such as Monash University and 
        Casey TAFE, where discrete institutions have taken advantage of the opportunity 
        of co-location to facilitate co-operation in course delivery as well as 
        other areas. In other cases there are substantial joint facilities and 
        extensive course articulation, with students able to study simultaneously 
        for a VET and a higher education credential. An example here is the Coffs 
        Harbour campus development, where the campus is occupied by a senior secondary 
        school, a TAFE institution and a university (Southern Cross University), 
        all with their own staff and internal structures, but boasting as well 
        a joint management structure where all three come together. In some instances 
        there is a single governing body but separate formal substructures, one 
        for each sector: RMIT is an example. There are also fully integrated models 
        - such as the Northern Territory University - where the separate funding 
        sources both feed a single entity which is managed as one.
      This list is not exhaustive. It illustrates, however, 
        a situation where, not only are models created to meet specific needs, 
        but policy-makers and educators are grappling with a fundamentally difficult 
        and complex set of structures and formal requirements - and attempting 
        to solve them as best they can. The problems exhibited by existing and 
        tried models lead to innovation and variation in new ventures, as the 
        instigators try to avoid difficulties experienced elsewhere. In making 
        these comments NTEU does not wish to over-emphasise the negative or daunting 
        aspects of cross-sectoral developments. The Committee, however, needs 
        to be aware that, given the various levels of Government and the fundamentally 
        different structures involved, problems and barriers are inevitable.
       
      Differences between the sectors
      Educational links and articulation of courses between 
        VET and higher education are to some extent hindered and inhibited by 
        the radically different contexts and conditions applying in the two sectors. 
        In VET, for example, a competency-based approach to curriculum and assessment, 
        and modular course design, characterise provision. The Australian Qualifications 
        Framework (AQF) and, beneath that, a wide range of national curricula 
        and systems of training modules effectively standardise much provision, 
        limiting institutional autonomy and in some respects also the professional 
        role of the teacher. In higher education, by contrast, academic staff 
        retain considerable professional autonomy in relation to course content, 
        curriculum and structure, and institutions themselves accredit and monitor 
        the quality of their courses through their internal structures such as 
        Academic Boards and periodic reviews of departments and particular courses. 
        Advisory structures including outside professional bodies, employers and 
        so on exist in some, but not all, areas, and are in any case institutionally 
        based.
      The backgrounds and qualifications of teaching staff 
        in the two sectors also differ markedly. In higher education, staff are 
        appointed and promoted in large part on the basis of their achievements 
        as researchers and scholars in their respective disciplines it is assumed 
        that the ability to make a contribution to teaching follows at least to 
        some extent from this background. In VET, on the other hand, teachers 
        are generally appointed on the basis of industry experience and professional 
        teaching qualifications. These differences reflect the respective approaches 
        and ethos of the sectors.
      Thus it is often argued that there is no easy match nor 
        necessarily a direct pathway from one sector to the other for students, 
        even within a field of study which apparently reaches across the sectoral 
        divide. Staff in universities, for instance, assert that two years of 
        Accountancy in TAFE is not equivalent to the same period in higher education 
        because the aims, approaches and fundamental assumptions associated with 
        courses in the sectors are too different. The truth of this assertion 
        varies in degree according to example and circumstance, but in general 
        terms it could be said that VET/TAFE provides a more practical, "how 
        to" training while universities in similar professional areas place 
        more emphasis on theory. Especially in the early years of vocational courses, 
        however, these differences can sometimes be overstated.
       
      Funding and financing
      Where real and profound differences exist between the 
        sectors is in their funding and in the student financing arrangements 
        to which they are subject. Terry Moran, Chief Executive Officer of the 
        Australian National Training Authority, estimated recently that total 
        higher education funding per student currently sits at about $13,800 per 
        year, compared to an average of $7,500 in TAFE/VET. While the Committee 
        will no doubt have before it detailed information on the respective funding 
        arrangements and levels applying to each sector, some of the implications 
        of these sharply different scenarios should be drawn out. Of particular 
        relevance to the current Inquiry is the fact that TAFE/VET courses are 
        provided at significantly lower cost than courses in similar areas in 
        higher education. This fact is reflected in teacher salaries and conditions, 
        in facilities, services, library provision and capital stock, and finally 
        in the modes of course delivery employed. For instance, while VET courses 
        are often delivered in packaged modules where self-paced learning, the 
        use of computers and simulation are featured, university teaching is more 
        commonly of the face-to-face variety, although the use of new technology 
        is now spreading rapidly in higher education.
      In public TAFE, upfront fees are imposed upon students. 
        These are relatively modest in comparison with the HECS-fees of higher 
        education (typically a few hundred dollars for a full-time student compared 
        to $3,300-$5,500 per annum in universities). HECS, however, is essentially 
        different from TAFE fees in that it involves a deferred-payment option 
        which is contingent upon the income of the student/graduate. The vast 
        majority - around 75% - of university students opt for the deferred payment, 
        thereby enrolling without incurring substantial immediate costs, aside 
        from student Organisation dues.
      This situation is anomalous on several counts. First, 
        the clientele of TAFE tends to come from lower socioeconomic groups than 
        the student body of higher education, yet TAFE students are obliged to 
        find the money for fees before they can embark on their studies. University 
        students enjoy an advantage in this regard. In addition, the HECS scheme, 
        which essentially provides loans to students at a real interest rate of 
        zero percent, effectively subsidises higher education students quite significantly. 
        TAFE students do not have access to such arrangements. On the other hand, 
        the share of costs borne by students in TAFE is substantially lower than 
        that typically borne by higher education students. Under the new differential 
        HECS arrangements introduced by the current Government, students in certain 
        courses pay up to 80% of the actual cost of their education, while the 
        average impost is 42%. In mainstream TAFE courses, students pay no more 
        than 10% of the cost of their tuition, and usually considerably less. 
        The funding and financing disparities outlined here are major issues in 
        any consideration of the respective roles of the two sectors, and have 
        important policy implications on a practical level. These matters will 
        be further discussed in section 4 of this submission.
       
      Successful models
      Despite the differences and difficulties alluded to above, 
        there are many examples of successful interaction and co-operation between 
        the sectors in tertiary education. Course articulation and credit transfer 
        schemes across the sectors exist in all States and in a range of disciplines. 
        Many TAFE institutions, through contractual and licensing arrangements 
        with universities, are involved in higher education teaching and other 
        forms of educational support for higher education students, predominantly 
        in the early years of university courses. The fact that these relationships 
        and arrangements are expanding indicates that those in both sectors are 
        confident and comfortable with them. Whether these developments can in 
        practice be satisfactorily mirrored in all areas and disciplines is, of 
        course, another question.
      The phenomena of higher education-to-VET articulation, 
        credit transfer and other _.. forms of student traffic also illustrate 
        the complementary roles which the sectors can . play in education and 
        vocational preparation. In particular, university graduates are increasingly 
        regarding VET as the appropriate venue for postgraduate vocational training 
        which will equip them for the job market in specific, often narrowly defined 
        areas. TAFE/VET professional courses, at Diploma level and above, can 
        build successfully on more general university education, or on a university 
        course in a different discipline, to create a graduate with particular 
        specialised practical skills. This should not be taken to imply that university 
        education is not vocationally relevant; the point is simply that VET qualifications 
        are often designed to fit very narrowly-defined or specific occupations 
        and, when combined with a university degree, may accord to the graduate 
        a competitive edge within the relevant field of employment. In 
        addition, of course, pricing structures across the respective sectors 
        often favour the "cheaper" VET sector; universities' strictly 
        commercial approach to much postgraduate coursework provision - exacerbated 
        significantly by the current Government's decision make substantial cuts 
        to HECS-related postgraduate places means high fees for students.
      The experience of various cross-sectoral institutions 
        indicates also that, although there may be significant problems and structural 
        or administrative hurdles to be overcome in these contexts, multi-sector 
        institutions can work successfully in tertiary education. This is not 
        to say that current funding, co-ordination and regulatory arrangements 
        are satisfactory; they clearly are not. It does show, however, that where 
        sufficient rationale and will exist, these difficulties can be handled 
        and contained. Ideally, funding and legislative arrangements in tertiary 
        education should facilitate rational and efficient use of resources across 
        the existing sectors, rather than, as at present, creating barriers to 
        their successful establishment and operation. This issue is dealt with 
        in Section 4 below.
       
      3. Future policy developments
      In this section some policy trends, which are likely 
        to have a major impact on tertiary education generally and in particular 
        on the relationship between VET and higher education, will be examined. 
        Many of these trends are deregulatory and shift the balance of funding 
        towards private individuals (students), involving a retreat from public 
        responsibility for funding and planning in tertiary education. NTEU's 
        concerns about this general tendency are outlined under a separate heading 
        below.
      The Committee Inquiry takes place in an atmosphere of 
        great change and fundamental review in tertiary education, especially, 
        but not only, higher education. In the VET sector, the Commonwealth has 
        moved to a quasi-voucher, employer-led system of funding in the core area 
        certificate-level trade training (apprenticeships), in the form of the 
        New Apprenticeships Scheme. Meanwhile, one State, Victoria, has embarked 
        upon a major process of restructuring and amalgamation,' accompanied by 
        fundamental changes to funding and co-ordination arrangements, in its 
        public TAFE system. The role of the private sector in VET is expanding 
        rapidly, due to the effects of the New Apprenticeships Scheme and to State-Government 
        policies on contracting out of public-sector functions - the latter also 
        particularly marked in Victoria.
      In higher education, the Inquiry follows a series of 
        policy shifts announced by the Commonwealth in the 1996-97 Federal Budget, 
        which represent the most. fundamental change in direction for the system 
        in over thirty years. The introduction of upfront undergraduate fees, 
        the cuts to university operating grants, the advent of unfunded, institution-based 
        enterprise bargaining and other deregulatory moves will profoundly alter 
        the landscape in Australian higher education. At the same time, the Federal 
        Government has initiated a major Review of Higher Education Financing 
        and Policy (the West Review), which is considering a complete reorganisation 
        of the funding and regulatory basis for the system. The Coalition Government's 
        enthusiastic embrace of the former Government's agenda of National Competition 
        Policy will pervade both sectors in tertiary education, as will the rapid 
        globalisation of world markets and communications, and developments 
        in communication technology.
       
      Developments in the VET sector
      The most significant policy change to hit the VET sector 
        in the next few years will be the introduction of competition through 
        the New Apprenticeship Scheme and its employer-led approach to the funding 
        and Organisation of trade training. The so-called "user choice" 
        model allows employers of trainees to direct Government funds to training 
        providers of their own choice - whether in-house, private or public TAFE 
        institutions. Aside from the issues of access and educational breadth 
        and quality which this policy raises, its impact will be profoundly deregulatory 
        and will actively entourage the establishment and expansion of private 
        VET provision. It will drive down costs, but, insofar as the policy leads 
        to the proliferation of small-scale, basically temporary, cut-price operations 
        in both the public and the private sector, any cost savings will be achieved 
        at the expense of quality, stability and employment in VET itself. It 
        will undermine and destabilise the public TAFE system and, as a result, 
        TAFE institutions will be obliged to seek means of consolidating themselves 
        by expanding and diversifying their activities outside their current core 
        areas possibly in co-operative relationships with the higher education 
        sector. They may also seek to amalgamate with other TAFE/VET institutions, 
        or with universities. They will certainly attempt to expand the extent 
        and scope of their commercial activities, in order to secure alternative 
        sources of income.
      The mooted developments in Victoria, on one reading, 
        provide a possible model for other States in this context. Although the 
        policy process is still in train, it seems likely that Victoria will move 
        towards a deregulated system of partially-privatised, autonomous VET institutions, 
        funded on a competitive basis. TAFE institutions may or may not merge 
        with each other, or with existing universities; presumably several different 
        patterns will emerge. In 1998 a capital charge will be introduced in Victorian 
        TAFE. Driven by the impetus of Competition Policy, this charge will be 
        applied to public TAFE institutions as a form of "rent" on their 
        capital stock, which is owned by the State, and will force TAFE institutes 
        to increase their commercial returns. This will be achieved either through 
        higher fees for students or through job loss and, consequently, reduced 
        services and educational quality.
      While all States have in place legislation and regulation 
        relating to private VET providers, there will be increasing pressure on 
        such regulation as the role of private operators in VET grows more prominent. 
        The recent financial collapse of a private VET college in Melbourne highlights 
        some of the emerging issues: the college was - registered in Queensland, 
        which has the least rigorous regulatory requirements of all the States, 
        but nevertheless operated in Victoria, far from the practical reach of 
        the relevant regulatory authorities. . Requirements in some States are 
        lax in the area of financial controls and safeguards, especially relating 
        to the security of student fees. Such regulation is crucial in ensuring 
        quality stability and steady growth, which is especially important in 
        expanding and supporting Australia's burgeoning education export market 
        in mainstream vocational education and training.
      The international education fiascos of the eighties, 
        especially in the ELICOS area, provide an obvious object lesson with broader 
        import, but the regulatory frameworks and provisions subsequently instituted 
        to deal with these disasters are in most cases not the same as those applied 
        to VET operations directed primarily at Australian students. Far from 
        having been settled with the introduction of the AQF and its attendant 
        structures and processes, regulation, including provisions for the accreditation 
        of courses, is an emerging issue in VET.
       
      Higher education
      The policy changes currently affecting higher education are at least 
        as profound as those taking place in VET. Rather than outlining them in 
        detail here, a broad-brush picture will be attempted, in order to provide 
        an impression of their extent and scope.
      It is clear that the Coalition Government intends to 
        reduce the share of university funding emanating from the public purse. 
        It has instituted significant cuts to operating grants - a total of 6% 
        on Labor's previous forward estimates by 2000 - and has already abolished 
        some discretionary funding pools and programs. It has radically altered 
        the balance between private and public contributions to the cost of higher 
        education by increasing the impost on students through HECS to an average 
        level of 42% of actual course cost. This renders Australia the most expensive 
        country in the entire developed world, in relative terms, in which to 
        study in publicly funded higher education institutions.
      As well, the Government has acted to reduce the number 
        of places available on a HECS-related basis at postgraduate level; the 
        area of postgraduate coursework provision is now predominantly commercialised. 
        Potentially, private operators can easily move into this market.
      But the most profound policy change wrought so far by 
        the Coalition has been the reversal of the prohibition on undergraduate 
        upfront tuition fees. Universities may now offer places to undergraduate 
        students on a fully commercial basis - within certain constraints. This 
        fundamentally deregulatory and destabilising move will push the system 
        inexorably towards wholesale contestability and, eventually, privatisation. 
        It will encourage the establishment of private providers in the undergraduate 
        market and will increase pressures for universal fee-charging as a top-up 
        to HECS. Coupled with a funding approach on the part of Government based 
        on competitive tendering, it will effectively render meaningless any distinction 
        between "public" and "private" institutions and provision, 
        leaving only the concept of a Government subsidy, which can be 
        allocated selectively direct to providers, or, via students, as a voucher. 
        The administrative and distributional problems associated with vouchers 
        as a means of higher education funding are profound; extracts from the 
        NTEU submission to the West Review of Higher Education Financing and Policy, 
        outlining the Union's views, are attached (Appendix A).
      Institutions have already responded to the new competitive 
        environment by shifting increasing proportions of their activities beyond 
        the reach and purview of Government regulation - into the private realm. 
        All have established various commercial companies and corporate arms, 
        through which most of their commercial activities are conducted. Some 
        universities have developed plans to establish virtualmirror images" 
        of themselves in the private sector - notably the University of Melbourne, 
        with its "Melbourne University" proposal, and also the University 
        of Central Queensland. By these means institutions seek to avoid public 
        and Government scrutiny and reporting requirements via the Higher Education 
        Funding Act (HEFA). The difficulty here is that, by means of such devices, 
        institutions will be able to receive and spend large sums of public money 
        on a series of functions quite clearly of vital interest from a public 
        policy perspective - higher education and research - outside an arena 
        where Government can monitor what they do with such funds. In a very real 
        sense, they are no longer accountable to the public for the expenditure 
        of taxpayers' money on the education of young Australians.
      The package of reforms known as National Competition 
        Policy, instituted under the aegis of the previous Labor Government, committed 
        the States and the Commonwealth to a systematic process of review of legislation 
        in the light of the agenda of the Policy. In the case of higher education, 
        formal review of the Higher Education Funding Act is not yet finished. 
        Nevertheless, the Coalition has acted to pre-empt the outcome of this 
        review, and also the outcome of its own independent Review (the West Review), 
        by introducing radical reforms to funding and financing arrangements in 
        higher education. These policies will have their own momentum: they will 
        create an environment of competition, user-pays funding and deregulation 
        in the university sector which goes well beyond the limited and regulated 
        competition envisaged for the sector by the instigators of National Competition 
        Policy - the previous Government. The new landscape will, however, closely 
        resemble the scenario for the sector painted in the Coalition's 1992 Fightback 
        manifesto.
      The direct impact of the Competition Policy agenda will 
        nevertheless be felt. In particular, the existing public system could 
        become subject to access regimes favouring private providers and will 
        be required to meet the various provisions of the Trade Practices Act 
        relating to anti-competitive practices, collusion and so on. Universities 
        will be subjected to taxes from which they are currently exempted, and 
        will most likely be required to pay a capital charge, along the lines 
        of that to be imposed in Victorian TAFE, to the Commonwealth.
      The issues relating to Competition Policy explicitly 
        referred to the West Review by the Government are the questions of, first, 
        criteria for access to the (higher education) market, and the conditions 
        which should attach to eligibility for the receipt of Commonwealth funds. 
        At the moment, the Government says, Commonwealth funds are available to 
        institutions on the basis of their inclusion or otherwise in HEFA's schedule 
        of institutions: To be listed in HEFA is to be eligible for funding. This 
        is all that distinguishes a university which is publicly funded or 'subsidised" 
        from one which is not - Monash, for example, from Bond. Thus a university, 
        or any provider, could in principle become eligible to receive funding 
        for higher education teaching and research purposes by means of a straightforward 
        amendment to the Act. Conditions attaching to the receipt of those funds 
        are, essentially, the provisions contained within the Act itself, and 
        associated guidelines and regulations.
      These include detailed reporting requirements, limitations 
        on the charging of tuition fees to undergraduate students, and provisions 
        relating to equity. They also oblige institutions to negotiate with the 
        Commonwealth by means of the process known as "educational profiles" 
        on their course mix and funded student load.
      Therefore, depending on the outcome of the West Review, 
        the basis for funding eligibility might change - for example, by establishing 
        an accreditation and registration authority to scrutinise and approve 
        institutions and courses for this purpose. Likewise, the conditions on 
        funding embodied in HEFA may be revised. It is likely that the Commonwealth 
        will consider proposals to streamline entry to the higher education "market" 
        and to simplify and reduce conditions on the receipt of Commonwealth subsidies 
        for higher education provision. All this will facilitate the expansion 
        of the private sector in higher education.
       
      Future relationships between VET and higher education
      Contestability and deregulation in both sectors of tertiary 
        education will inevitably create new opportunities for each to make inroads 
        into the current activities and sphere of the other. There seems no prima 
        facie reason why VET institutions, either public or private, could 
        not tender for publicly-subsidised higher education places and programs 
        - or vice versa. This will have far-reaching implications. If the two 
        sectors effectively become competitors for the public dollar, then their 
        vastly different cost structures and their respective emphases and strengths 
        become crucial public policy issues. Both sectors have clear advantages 
        against this scenario. VET provision is cheaper; higher education institutions, 
        on the other hand, could easily extend and expand into sub-degree provision 
        and would have a different but equally compelling competitive edge. Boundaries 
        between the existing sectors would become much more blurred, and could 
        even disappear altogether. Certainly, some institutions in both sectors 
        will seek to strengthen and consolidate their positions by forging closer 
        relationships across and within existing boundaries.
      Whether this outcome is necessarily desirable, from the point of view 
        of quality, pedagogy or even equity, is debatable. In the final section 
        of this submission NTEU sets out what it believes to be appropriate policy 
        limits in this area.
       
      Privatisation and deregulation: some issues
      NTEU has a strong and unequivocal policy position that 
        tertiary education should be provided through the public sector. Far from 
        being doctrinaire, this view is based on practical considerations of access, 
        equity, accountability quality and efficient use of resources. A market-based 
        approach to education limits access, especially equitable access, because 
        inevitably, in a resource-intensive and specialised field like education, 
        there will be market failure. Further, since such approaches normally 
        feature a user-pays form of financing, then those who cannot pay, largely 
        the disadvantaged, are denied access. or at the least find their options 
        limited by financial considerations.
      Accountability, and with it quality, are considerably 
        more difficult to ensure in the market. Again, this is partly due to the 
        special characteristics of education, which mean that "customer" 
        choice cannot act as proxy for quality control; the potential "customers" 
        by definition have imperfect knowledge and thus are unable to exercise 
        informed choice. Nor does the market, especially a poorly regulated market, 
        bring accountability. The legislative and other regulatory safeguards 
        of the rights and interests of students, enshrined in HEFA and other legislation 
        applicable to the public sector, do not in general extend to the private 
        sector of education. Finally, the planning and co-ordination of resource 
        use in tertiary education is crucial in a country with the scattered and 
        peculiar demographics of Australia: if there is to be a reasonable spread 
        of opportunities across the nation, and if wasteful duplication is to 
        be avoided, then central planning and regulation are necessary.
      On a practical level, thought should be given to the 
        nature and background of potential and actual private education providers. 
        Some may be based overseas. Many, however, have their origin in the public 
        sector; they have established themselves as private operators in order 
        to avoid regulation, or else to find alternative employment as Government 
        policies favouring the private sector take hold and shrink public institutions. 
        The shift from public to private is largely ideologically driven, and 
        is not based on any real view that private provision is necessarily better 
        or more efficient. Indeed, its inherent inefficiencies and the practical 
        problems associated with accountability and quality control might lead 
        to the conclusion that, in general, public-sector provision of tertiary 
        education is a more sensible policy.
      Where a private sector exists, or where Government deliberately 
        makes room for one to grow, then it is essential that rapid and thoroughgoing 
        regulatory structures be put in place. Especially in the light of the 
        value to Australia of the international education market and other knowledge-based 
        industries, it is necessary to ensure, as far as possible, that the quality 
        of private tertiary education matches that in the public sector. The NTEU 
        policy on how this is to be achieved in higher education, adopted at the 
        Union's 1997 National Council Meeting, is attached (Appendix B).
       
      4. Policy directions: the future role of TAFE institutions
      1. Regulation
      This submission has argued that the profound policy changes 
        currently under way in both sectors of tertiary education will inevitably 
        force change on the existing roles and functions of each sector, as well 
        as on the relationships between them. In particular, the trends towards 
        deregulation and privatisation will have deep impact on the fundamental 
        shape and nature of tertiary education in Australia. Against this trend, 
        unless State and Federal Governments move to impose regulation and to 
        adopt policies which provide a framework limiting the scope of the private 
        sector on the one hand, and on publicly-funded institutions and their 
        activities on the other, then both VET and higher education will become 
        seriously destabilised and almost completely deregulated.
      While the terms of reference of the current Inquiry may 
        seem tangential to this much broader issue, policy options for public 
        TAFE cannot be considered outside of this context. A funding environment 
        dominated by contestability, unless regulated in relevant ways, is ipso 
        facto an environment where competition occurs between existing and 
        emerging higher education providers, on the one hand, and TAFE/VET on 
        the other. Of course, it is also an environment where competition takes 
        place between "public" TAFE institutions and other providers 
        of VET, possibly including some in the schools sector.
       
      Recommendation 1
      Governments should, as a matter of urgency, introduce 
        legislation designed to ensure the quality and accountability of private 
        tertiary education. In particular, the Commonwealth should move 
        to amend the Higher Education Funding Act to regulate the relationships 
        between institutions listed in the Act, on the one hand, and other public 
        and private institutions on the other, along the lines of the policy outlined 
        as Appendix B to this submission.
       
      2. Statutory limits and regulation relating to cross-sectoral 
        activities
      NTEU believes that it is in the public interest that 
        the discrete roles and emphases of the two existing sectors of tertiary 
        education be retained and preserved. This is not to assert that the boundaries 
        between them should be rigid and impassable, or to deny that, in some 
        circumstances, institutions located in one sector might be well placed 
        to perform functions usually carried out in the complementary sector - 
        on the basis of efficiency and effectiveness. In particular, a flexible 
        and creative approach to this issue is advantageous when it comes to the 
        provision of tertiary education in rural and regional areas.
      However, without a clear and active role for Government 
        in coordinating and planning, it is more than likely that competition 
        for funds, far from encouraging diversity, would lead to undesirable, 
        dysfunctional homogeneity in tertiary education. Providers would tend 
        to expand their activities, to diversify their functions, in order to 
        enhance their potential as competitors. Universities would develop VET 
        offshoots; VET institutions would seek to develop the capacity to offer 
        higher education. While patterns would vary depending on the particular 
        situations and strengths of individual institutions, many providers would 
        feel compelled to broaden their capacities in a fairly undifferentiated 
        manner. Niche providers and specialists would be outnumbered by those 
        trying to position themselves to compete right across the spectrum of 
        possible 'markets".
       
      Recommendation 2
      The following measures are recommended:
      (i) Provision of higher education by TAFE/VET institutions
      TAFE or other VET providers should not be eligible 
        for Commonwealth funding for the purposes of higher education provision 
        except where such providers are accredited and monitored through the academic 
        processes of an existing higher education institution which is empowered 
        by State or Federal statute to grant degrees. The degree-level credentials 
        offered by such providers should be credentials of the accrediting institution.
      (ii) Credit transfer and articulation from VET to higher education
      The development and expansion of schemes linking VET and higher education 
        study by means of systematic, explicit credit transfer and course articulation 
        should be encouraged and facilitated by both relevant levels of Government. 
        Nevertheless, such schemes should be regulated in order to ensure that 
        educational quality and the principles of access and equity are preserved, 
        especially where commercially-based (fee-paying) VET provision is involved. 
        This regulation should be achieved by amendment to the Higher Education 
        Funding Act, and should, among other things:
      
        - limit the proportion of a course leading to a higher education 
          credential which can be undertaken by study in courses leading normally 
          to VET credentials, offered either within or outside the higher education 
          sector by means of credit transfer and/or advanced standing arrangements; 
          
 
        
- regulate course articulation arrangements between non-higher education 
          institutions and higher education institutions to ensure that the VET 
          components of such arrangements are appropriately accredited and monitored 
          by the normal academic processes of the relevant higher education institution;
        
 
        
- ensure that such arrangements between VET and higher education 
          providers are accessible on a HECS-related or non-commercial (publicly 
          funded) basis at both levels, and are not limited, or predominantly 
          limited, to fee-paying students;
        
- are appropriately resourced and funded.
Cross-sectoral developments should only occur in full consultation 
        with the relevant staff and student organisations, and with affected and 
        potentially affected general and teaching/academic staff.
      (iii) Articulation and credit transfer from higher education to 
        the VET sector
      As far as possible, credit transfer from higher education 
        to VET should be available in the form of explicitly established articulation 
        arrangements rather than on an ad hoc basis. The needs of individual 
        students, however, should also be accommodated wherever possible. Funding 
        for curriculum development and related costs should be available through 
        HEFA for such purposes.
       
      3. Funding and co-ordination: harmonising 
        the roles and approaches of State and Commonwealth Governments
      The sharply differing bases for funding and policy in 
        the two sectors of tertiary education, as already noted, constitute serious 
        impediments to the efficient and rational development of cross-sectoral 
        arrangements. NTEU believes that, as a matter of urgency, the Commonwealth 
        should assume full responsibility for the funding and co-ordination of 
        the public TAFE system, and for the regulation and accreditation of all 
        VET provision. This view is based not merely on considerations relating 
        to cross-sectoral developments and co-operation, but with regard to the 
        potential benefits to the system as a whole, especially efficiency, consistency 
        of approach and regulation and quality assurance, especially in the private 
        sector.
      The advent of the Australian Qualifications Framework 
        and, under the aegis of ANTA, nationally-formulated curriculum in mainstream 
        vocational areas, developed on the basis of competency standards, there 
        seems little reason to retain a central role for the States and Territories 
        in VET policy formulation and funding. A consistent set of national standards 
        for accountability, educational quality and financial probity would remove 
        currently-existing anomalies between the States, which presently enable 
        unscrupulous private operators to exploit differences to their advantage, 
        and to the disadvantage of clients.
      While it is true to say that, in some respects, closer 
        links are now being forged between VET and the schools sector - in the 
        form of vocational education integrated with school study in the post-compulsory 
        years - developments involving both higher education and VET will be at 
        least as significant and, given the institutional structures and funding 
        regimes in which these take place, then the more sensible approach would 
        be to shift responsibility for VET entirely into the Federal arena, 
        rather than to affirm the status quo, which is essentially a complicated 
        hybrid of shared responsibilities and regulation between the levels of 
        Government. This confusing mixture of funding sources and policy is historical 
        in origin, and reflects today the growing awareness on the part of the 
        Commonwealth of the need to organise vocational education and training 
        along national lines.
      Such a policy change would facilitate planning and development 
        in the tertiary education sector as a whole. It would also encourage efficiency 
        in the form of intersectoral co-operation and joint projects, and 
        where appropriate, the establishment of cross-sectoral facilities and 
        institutions.
       
      Recommendation 3
      In order to develop a national approach to the provision of vocational 
        education and training, and to foster appropriate co-operative and joint 
        developments between VET and higher education, the Commonwealth should:
      (i) assume full responsibility for the funding and 
        co-ordination of the public TAFE system;
      (ii) develop a national accreditation system for all 
        VET provision, including consistent national standards for accountability, 
        educational quality and financial probity;
      (iiii) devise and fund schemes designed to encourage and facilitate 
        intersectoral collaboration, joint projects and, where appropriate, cross 
        sectoral facilities and institutions.
       
      4. Patterns for cross-sectoral relationships and 
        institutions
      Even under a regime where funding and policy were centred at national 
        level, there is no policy compulsion to standardise the formula for intersectoral 
        co-operation. Already, as noted in Section 2 of this submission, a range 
        of different models exists.
      All of these models have their strengths and all, it 
        could be argued, have been shaped to fit the particular needs for which 
        they cater. Where problems exist, the discrepancies between funding levels, 
        sources and systems, and other issues including industrial issues - arising 
        from their respective sectoral locations are often the cause. A shift 
        of responsibilities for VET exclusively to the Federal sphere would 
        eliminate or at least reduce these policy tensions. Nevertheless, NTEU 
        would caution against the rigid imposition of a single model for cross-sectoral 
        institutions and joint ventures across the system as a whole. The involvement 
        of campus unions, of students and of the local community in these developments 
        is essential for success and confidence to grow; as a corollary, outcomes 
        in terms of patterns and structures will inevitably vary.
      Recommendation 4
      The Commonwealth should encourage the development 
        of models for cross-sectoral collaboration which suit particular circumstances. 
        It should require institutions embarking upon such developments to do 
        so in full consultation with relevant unions and campus student organisations.
       
      5. Competitive tendering across the sectors
      NTEU recognises that, as an outcome of the imposition 
        of National Competition Policy throughout the public sector, it is likely 
        that at least some level of contestability will be introduced in an explicit 
        sense to Commonwealth funding in tertiary education. The Union has grave 
        doubts about the wisdom of such an approach. Nevertheless, if competitive 
        tendering is to become part of the basis of the system's funding mechanism, 
        then it would be sensible, given the potentially destabilising effects 
        of such a policy, to proceed with caution. An incremental, experimental 
        policy is essential
      As a wholesale replacement for block funding, however, 
        NTEU is far from sanguine about competitive tendering. Some of the Union's 
        concerns are outlined in the attached NTEU submission to the Industry 
        Commission's 1995 Inquiry into Competitive Tendering and Contracting in 
        the Public Sector (Appendix C).
       
      Recommendation 5
      In the interests of stability, the maintenance of quality and efficiency, 
        the Commonwealth should not introduce a broadly-based system of competitive 
        tendering as the basic mechanism for public funding in tertiary education. 
        If an element of competition is to be introduced, the policy should be 
        implemented incrementally, should involve detailed regulation of the market 
        and should initially be experimental and small in scale.
       
      6. Regional and rural Australia
      As implied above, NTEU believes that, in regional areas, there may be 
        good reason to support cross-sectoral developments in tertiary education. 
        The policy aim must be to enhance and extend access for rural and regional 
        populations to all forms of publicly-funded tertiary education. Where 
        efficiencies and economies of scale can be generated by means of joint 
        and other co-operative arrangements across the sectors, then these should 
        be pursued
       
      Recommendation 6
      Where economies of scale and other efficiencies can 
        be generated, the Commonwealth should provide financial and other forms 
        of encouragement for the development of joint VET-higher education facilities 
        and ventures in rural and regional Australia.
       
      7. Implications of new technology and flexible teaching and learning
      In some respects the trend towards augmentation and replacement 
        of classroom teaching by learning packages and computer-assisted learning 
        programs will accelerate the speed of policy change in areas relevant 
        to the current Inquiry. NTEU believes that these developments should be 
        carefully implemented and evaluated, from the point of view of educational 
        quality and from the perspectives of access and equity, before they are 
        adopted with unbounded enthusiasm as the solution to containing costs 
        in an expanding tertiary education system. The Union's policy in this 
        area, adopted at its 1997 National Council Meeting, is attached (Appendix 
        D).
       
      Recommendation 7
      The Commonwealth should provide adequate funding for 
        the purchase, installation and associated staff development requirements 
        associated with new technology and other approaches to flexible teaching 
        and learning in public tertiary education. These funds should be available 
        on the basis of sound educational benefit and should include financial 
        assistance to ensure that students enjoy adequate access to such programs, 
        and facilities, regardless of personal means.
       
      8. Industrial and professional issues
      Many of the issues discussed in this submission impinge intimately on 
        the working conditions and professional interests of the staff of universities 
        and TAFE institutions. It is crucial, if new structures, arrangements 
        and relationships are to work successfully, that they enjoy the confidence 
        of those charged with responsibility for making them viable, effective 
        and efficient - the staff who are employed in the programs and institutions 
        concerned. The experience of NTEU has shown clearly that, where radically 
        new structures, procedures, professional requirements and contexts are 
        imposed without adequate involvement and consultation with affected staff, 
        problems tend to proliferate.
      This is especially important when it is borne in mind 
        that, in TAFE-higher education interactions, industrial conditions and 
        salaries vary markedly between the sectors. The record shows that constructive 
        compromise and rational demarcation can be arrived at, but this must emanate 
        from a process of genuine, inclusive consultation with relevant unions 
        and also, under the auspices of their industrial organisations, directly 
        with affected staff themselves. This point cannot be over-emphasised. 
        If certain forms of joint or co-operative ventures become more 
        prevalent, unions may seek to pursue a common approach to regulation through 
        the Federal industrial sphere. Locally-based agreement on changes to conditions, 
        however, are presently the more common pattern.
      From a professional perspective, it should be remembered 
        that teaching staff in particular in the respective sectors hold strong 
        beliefs about the nature and ethos of the type of institution in which 
        they work, and in which they wish to continue "Lo be professionally 
        engaged. These perspectives have much in common across the sectors, but 
        they also vary in important ways connected to the core aims of each. Proposals, 
        or the implementation of plans and policies, which ignore these legitimate 
        differences and variations will fail not only the individual teachers, 
        academics and other staff concerned but will threaten the quality of the 
        educational experience available to students, and the value of the credentials 
        with which they emerge.
       
      Recommendation 8
      Cross-sectoral co-operation and joint developments 
        should be planned and implemented in full consultation with, and with 
        regard to the professional and industrial interests of, affected staff. 
        This consultation should take place under the auspices of the relevant 
        unions.
       
      9. Student financing
      It was noted earlier in this submission that student 
        financing arrangements vary sign significantly across the two sectors 
        of tertiary education. Whereas full-time students in both sectors are 
        eligible for Austudy benefits, their contributions to the cost of their 
        study are quite differently set and collected. For students, these variations 
        can influence their educational choices: an upfront fee, as charged in 
        TAFE, may prove a deterrent for some students unable to get hold of the 
        necessary cash. On the other hand, the considerably higher cost of a university 
        place would deter those prepared to pay upfront, but wishing to avoid 
        a sizeable debt paid off after graduation - or, in an increasing number 
        of cases (due to the significant reduction in the compulsory repayment 
        threshold for HECS) paid off concurrently with study.
      These differences are clearly anomalies which in some 
        ways are undesirable from a policy point of view. Some have argued that 
        the solution to the problem lies in a shift - to a HECS-style option for 
        payment of tuition fees in TAFE. While this has clear financial advantages 
        from the point of view of students, there are long-term policy dangers. 
        As experience in higher education has shown, the introduction of a relatively 
        benign contribution regime in the form of HECS has proved a Trojan horse: 
        a new Government has simply appropriated the mechanism-n of HECS - as 
        a deferred-payment, income related repayment scheme, but abandoned the 
        rationale on which public acceptance for the Scheme was based. No longer 
        does repayment commence only when a graduate's income reaches the level 
        of average weekly earnings - so that it can be clearly argued that the 
        individual has begun to benefit financially from their higher education. 
        And charges under the Scheme, which previously were in line with those 
        imposed in public systems in other developed countries, have now risen 
        sharply, rendering Australia one of the most expensive countries in which 
        to study at a publicly-funded university. The original purpose and intentions 
        of the Scheme have been seriously distorted.
      If such a mechanism were to be introduced in TAFE, the 
        same sleeping problems would be introduced with it. Fees could rise exponentially, 
        on the basis that they would not pose an upfront barrier. Eventually, 
        as the (admittedly early) experience with massive HECS increases has shown, 
        the level of the charges would have a deterrent effect on participation. 
        On balance, therefore, it may be preferable to retain the TAFE upfront 
        charges, as a measure deliberately designed to restrain increases in their 
        levels. In any case, the socioeconomic composition of the TAFE student 
        body is much more representative of that of society as a whole than is 
        the composition of students in higher education; this may indicate that 
        the relatively low level of TAFE charges means that the fee is 
        not a barrier to participation.
      Recommendation 9
      The Government should exercise caution in the area of 
        student financing policy in VET. Before any decision is made to introduce 
        a deferred-payment option for fees in the VET sector, the Government should 
        commission a detailed review of existing arrangements which includes an 
        analysis of the potential effects of proposed changes to student financing 
        arrangements, including future rises in the levels of fees charged.
       
      
5. Conclusion
      NTEU supports policies designed to expand and enhance 
        access to publicly-funded tertiary education in Australia. The Union has 
        much concrete experience in the area of cross-sectoral relations between 
        higher education and the VET sector, including publicly-funded TAFE. NTEU 
        'has also played an active role in the long-running policy debates in 
        this and related areas. The Committee is urged to pay close attention 
        to the Union's views, and to proceed with caution and balance in the development 
        of recommendations in this difficult area of public policy.
      
      
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