AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 4 No. 35
In our lead story this
week…..
UNIONS FIGHT TO KEEP EDUCATION OUT OF GATS
Five education unions, representing 65,000 members
across the sector, have renewed their battle to prevent
trade in education services being further liberalised under
the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). New
Zealand is one of two countries that have tabled papers
promoting the idea of extending existing trade commitments
for education under the new trading regime. The issue is
coming up for discussion at a meeting of the World Trade
Organisation in Geneva this week. AUS President, Neville
Blampied, has written to the Minister of Education, Trevor
Mallard, on behalf of the five unions expressing "serious
misgivings" about the proposal. He says it will leave
national public education systems open to transnational
education enterprises. He also stresses that the concept of
education as "a tradable service" is fundamentally
incompatible with the principle of a "quality public
education that is free and universally available." Mr
Blampied is calling on the government to withdraw the paper
it has tabled and to speak "forcefully" against the
extension of GATS commitments on education. Instead he wants
New Zealand to push for education and related services to be
excluded from the agreement. He is also calling for an
urgent meeting with the Minister to discuss the issue. As
well as AUS, the other unions are ASTE, NZEI, PPTA and
TIASA.
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
1. Clause 33
enacted
2. More pay offer rejections
3. Otago ahead of
budget
4. CORE funding announced
5. Proposal to keep
Kiwis abroad in touch
6. Graduate tax proposed
7. Pay
parity 'neglected'
CLAUSE 33 ENACTED
Parliament has
passed new legislation for the governance of tertiary
education institutions, including the controversial clause
that allows the minister to remove a university council and
appoint a commissioner in its place. AUS and the New
Zealand Vice-Chancellors' Committee had lobbied strenuously
against Clause 33, arguing that either universities be
excluded from this part of the legislation, or that the
matter be put aside until the introduction before the end of
the year of the Education Amendment (No. 3) Bill. That is
expected to establish and clarify the role of the Tertiary
Education Commission in the new-look set-up for the sector.
However, the legislation did see some amendments put forward
by the Green Party in return for its support. The Green's
tertiary education spokesperson, Nandor Tanczos said his
party shared tertiary sector concerns over the circumstances
under which a university council could be replaced. The
amendments mean a commissioner can only be appointed when an
institution can no longer pay its debts, making it what he
calls "a last ditch option". The Green Party support was
also contingent on the legislation being reviewed and the
results being reported back to Parliament in five years
time. AUS welcomes the Green Party action.
MORE PAY
OFFER REJECTIONS
Staff at Victoria University in
Wellington are the latest to reject their pay offer as the
sector pushes for an 8% rise in salaries. They rejected an
offer of 1.8%. Massey staff are expected to reject their
offer of 1.5% a year for the next three years (with a review
in year two and three if funding increases), while academic
and general staff at Waikato are unhappy with their zero
offer. There has been no offer yet from Otago (see next
article).
And we must record that the 1.5% increase
accepted by general staff at Lincoln University (see
"Tertiary Update", Vol. 4 No. 34) was a settlement of
negotiations which had commenced before the current
recommended national claim was set.
OTAGO AHEAD OF
BUDGET
The University of Otago is ahead of its budget by
$4.5m due to higher than expected commercial income and
external research grants. A financial report tabled at the
latest council meeting showed the university had an
operating surplus of $13,785,000 at the end of August, well
up on the budgeted surplus for the period of $9,244,000. The
report also said Vote:Education funding was expected to be
more than $1m ahead of budget by the end of the year, due
mainly to favourable changes in the student funding mix.
But the report also indicates that the university remains
under financial pressure, with problems with recruitment and
retention of staff. "Tertiary Update" notes that the
surplus will be welcome news for Otago's human capital - its
staff - who have been waiting for the university to table an
offer in the current round of negotiations.
CORE FUNDING
CRITERIA ANNOUNCED
The government has unveiled its
criteria for the Centres of Research Excellence Fund. The
emphasis will be on research that is of world-class,
contributes to New Zealand's development, and incorporates
knowledge transfer activities, especially in research
training. Further information is contained at the Royal
Society of New Zealand website
at
http://www.rsnz.govt.nz/funding/core/
PROPOSAL TO
KEEP KIWIS ABROAD IN TOUCH
Plans are underway to set up
a professional society for New Zealanders working in
knowledge-based industries in Silicon Valley in California.
The idea has come from a Canterbury University graduate,
Professor David Teece, who is now working at the University
of California at Berkeley. He is working with businessman
Stephen Tindall and the Tindall Foundation to set up the
Society of Silicon Valley Kiwis. They envisage setting up an
Internet database that New Zealand companies wanting to hire
Kiwis who have had experience abroad would be able to use to
access potential employees. As well, the society would hold
meetings to update New Zealanders working in California on
developments and opportunities in New Zealand, and give New
Zealand entrepreneurs the opportunity to keep in touch with
developments in the knowledge-based industries. The plan is
to eventually extend the idea to other parts of the world.
WORLD WATCH
GRADUATE TAX PROPOSED
The British
government is considering doing away with tuition payments
and student loans for university students and replacing them
with a special income tax on graduates. The Prime Minister,
Tony Blair told last week's Labour Party's annual conference
that a better way had to be found to combine state funding
and student contributions, fuelling speculation that major
changes were on the way. Reports say that a 2% tax on
university graduates is a frontrunner to replace loans and
fees. The supplementary tax would apply for up to 25 years
but it is possible that graduates entering public service
professions and those in low-income employment might be
exempt.
PAY PARITY 'NEGLECTED'
A British lecturers'
union has accused universities of doing little to ensure
female lecturers are on a par with their male colleagues.
Tom Wilson of NATHFE says latest statistics on pay for
full-time academics show that men are, on average, paid
£2,190 more than women. He says the gap rises with age, and
is worse in the higher positions. In the 51 to 60 age
group, Mr Wilson says, women's pay has fallen an average of
14% behind men's. The problem occurs across the board, even
in areas such as education where women have traditionally
made up a larger proportion of the workforce. Mr Wilson
says the gender gap is also wider where pay is determined by
local, rather than national, bargaining. He says most
universities are ignoring the problem, despite that fact
that NATHFE had set equal opportunity targets for them
earlier this year. The other British university staff
union, the Association of University Teachers, welcomes the
latest findings, saying they support its own research on the
pay gender gap in
universities.
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AUS
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