1301.0 - Year Book Australia, 2002  
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 25/01/2002   
   Page tools: Print Print Page  
Contents >> Education and Training >> Government assistance to students

Commonwealth Government assistance is summarised in table 10.4. Student numbers should not be totalled, because students may transfer from one student assistance program to another during a year, and some students can receive the Student Financial Supplement Scheme (SFSS) in conjunction with one of the other payments (see the section Student Financial Supplement Scheme further down ).

10.4 STUDENT ASSISTANCE SCHEMES - 1999-2000

Scheme
Students
no.
Assistance
$m

Youth Allowance
309,579
1,965
Austudy
42,838
221
Abstudy
49,755
154
Assistance to Isolated Children (AIC)
11,900
31
Youth Allowance SFSS
9,927
39
Austudy SFSS
17,222
68
Abstudy SFSS
8,979
47

Source: Department of Education, Training and Youth Affairs; and Department of Family and Community Services.

Austudy and Youth Allowance

In 1998, Youth Allowance replaced AUSTUDY (now called Austudy) and a number of other payments for young people under 25 years. Youth Allowance is for full-time students under 25 years and unemployed people under 21 years. Austudy now covers full-time students 25 years and over. Youth Allowance and Austudy are administered by the Department of Family and Community Services, and delivered by Centrelink. These systems aim to provide an equal opportunity for access to education by all Australians, through provision of financial assistance to support students who could not otherwise continue their studies. At 30 June 2000, some 309,579 and 42,838 students benefited from Youth Allowance and Austudy, respectively.


ABSTUDY

ABSTUDY represents a major component of the Government's commitment, under the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education Policy, to encourage Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples to take full advantage of educational opportunities, to promote equality of education, to be involved in decision making, and to improve educational outcomes.

The scheme provides financial assistance for eligible Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander persons who undertake approved secondary or tertiary education courses by full-time study, by correspondence, or who undertake part-time tertiary study. There is also some assistance available to primary students aged 14 years or over who live at home. In 1999-2000, ABSTUDY assisted almost 50,000 students.



Assistance for isolated children

The Assistance for Isolated Children (AIC) scheme helps the families of primary and secondary students, and tertiary students under 16 years old, who do not have reasonable daily access to an appropriate government school primarily because of their geographic isolation. An 'appropriate school' is a government school which offers the student's level of study or, if the student has special health-related or educational needs, one which provides access to the facilities, programs and/or environment required for those needs.

Apart from the additional Boarding Allowance, all AIC allowances are free from income and assets tests, but applicants must meet the eligibility criteria. In 1999-2000, the AIC scheme assisted 11,900 students, and expenditure was $31m.


Student Financial Supplement Scheme

The Student Financial Supplement Scheme (SFSS) is a voluntary loan scheme introduced in 1993. It is available to students receiving Youth Allowance, Austudy, ABSTUDY and the Pensioner Education Supplement. Dependent full-time students who are not eligible for Youth Allowance may still access a SFSS loan if parental income is below a certain threshold, which was $55,350 in 1999-2000. Loan repayments do not commence until five years after the loan was taken out and only when income reaches a certain level ($31,126 in 1999-2000).

During 1999-2000 some 36,128 students took up the SFSS option, receiving $154m in loans. Students receiving Youth Allowance took out $39m in SFSS loans, Austudy recipients took out $68m in SFSS loans, and Abstudy recipients $47m in loans.



Previous PageNext Page