Why regional universities and communities need targeted help to ride out the coronavirus storm
- Written by Mehmet Aslan, Honorary Fellow, School of Humanities and Social Inquiry, University of Wollongong
Australian universities are expected to lose billions of dollars in revenue due to the impacts of COVID-19. The estimated lost revenue from international students alone is A$18 billion by 2024. While all universities are affected, regional universities and communities are the most vulnerable.
Regional communities have limited resources, so their universities play a pivotal role in their economies. These universities must adjust to the rapidly changing circumstances and government policy changes, or risk jeopardising regional economic growth and jobs. Without targeted government support for these smaller universities, the long-term impacts on regional communities could be devastating.
The Regional Universities Network (RUN) includes CQUniversity, Southern Cross University, Federation University Australia, University of New England, University of Southern Queensland, University of the Sunshine Coast and Charles Sturt University. CQUniversity, where 39% of students are international students, has a revenue shortfall of A$116 million for 2020. Charles Sturt University (32% international students) faces a loss of about A$80 million.

Read more: COVID-19: what Australian universities can do to recover from the loss of international student fees
What are the regional economic impacts?
All universities face job losses as a result of COVID-19. But the impacts of these job losses are greatest for regional economies.
RUN chair Helen Bartlett told a federal parliamentary committee hearing in May:
Job losses from regional universities have a significant impact on regional communities when there are few alternatives for professional employment locally.

She called on the government to double the annual regional loading funding of A$74 million.
Regional universities educate around 115,000 students each year. That’s about 9% of enrolments at Australian public universities.
A 2018 study found regional universities inject A$1.7 billion a year into their local economies. And seven out of ten graduates go on to work in regional areas.
Regional universities also contribute over A$2.1 billion and more than 14,000 full-time jobs to the national economy.



Authors: Mehmet Aslan, Honorary Fellow, School of Humanities and Social Inquiry, University of Wollongong