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CEO Suggests ‘Infrastructure Levy’ for International Students Will Attract Talent, Reduce Housing Costs

Tech CEO Matt Barrie has suggested international students pay an “infrastructure levy” to pay their fair share of the investment needed to build up Australia’s infrastructure services for a rapidly increasing population.
Barrie, CEO of the world’s largest freelance platform, Freelancer.com, said the move could also filter out those using student visas as a backdoor to permanent residency from genuine students and skilled migrants “who are prepared to invest in their future and contribute to a society.”
“Instead, Australians are supposed to live with a deterioration in quality of life and economic services, and the mathematical impossibility of an Australian being able to buy the average house given that a salary is now useless to buy a house in many regions of Australia.”
He noted the government currently has a low standard for international students, as they only need proof they can afford their daily necessities for living in Australia.
“Surprisingly, the government only requires you to provide proof you’ve had $29,710 ($US20,181) and only once, regardless of how many years you’ll be studying for, and regardless of how much you really need to live.”
“The combined contribution of these [students] is woefully insufficient to cover the true costs associated with accommodating a huge growth in population, leading state coffers to bear the brunt of the burden,” he said.
“It is an insult to the hardworking taxpayers in each state who are effectively shouldering the burden for the lifestyles of students and many economic migrants while their home quality of life crumbles.”
Barrie said each year, the government spent around $640 billion on defence, education, health, social security, welfare, housing, and other public services.
With a population of 26 million, each Australian pays about $24,000 a year per capita for infrastructure, he added.
“How is a student bringing in $29,000 to live on paying for their share of the infrastructure, if it costs us $24,000?” Barrie asked.
“The current arrangement is a perversive version of what a rational, equitable system would look like.”
In addition, the CEO pointed to videos on YouTube and TikTok where students were shown how to get free food from Australian donation centres.
“I’m not sure why we’re providing visas for international students who can’t afford to feed themselves,” he said. “This is not supposed to be an export of a humanitarian program.”
Another point raised by Barrie was that a large portion of international students are enrolled in impractical study programs.
“Of the 787,000 international students, 272,000 are enrolled in vocational programs of VET courses and 79,078 in English [courses],” he said.
“What outcomes would anyone reasonably expect to achieve with an Advanced Diploma of Leadership and Talent from one of a dozen business colleges crammed into a random building?
“Does anyone expect that this qualification will lead to better opportunities when the student returns to Columbia, Nepal, India, or China?”
Barrie also alleged that flooding “fake students” in the country was exacerbating inflation.
However, Barrie said this figure was not true.
“The export of education-related travel services is nothing more than a statistical trick,” he said.
He said the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) includes every dollar international students spend, including rent, as an export, even if that money was earned in Australia.
“If education-related travel services really were $48 billion in exports, surely we would at least see it in cash coming into the country each year,” he said.
“When you look at the international remittance volume into Australia in 2023, there was only $2 billion coming in and $10 billion going out.”
Education Minister Jason Clare said there were people exploiting the education industry for their own benefit.
Yet the new policy has raised concerns among universities and the Victorian government, dubbed the “education state,” about its potential economic impact.

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