PM rules out collecting debt from dead students' estates

Prime Minister Tony Abbott has ruled out the idea that the government will collect unpaid tertiary student debts from the estates of the dead.

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(AAP)

Reports earlier this morning suggested the government was in favour of the idea.

Education Minister Christopher Pyne told Fairfax Media from the government to the approach.

But Prime Minister Abbott has insisted there are no plans to change the current rules.

"I want to make it absolutely crystal clear this government is not going to change the existing rules," he told the ABC.

"And the existing rule in respect of university debts, fee help debts, HECS debts, is that they cease, they cease, on decease, as it were."

Grattan Institute higher education specialist Andrew Norton estimates collecting unpaid HECS-HELP debts from deceased estates could net the government $2.8 billion over the next three years.

Currently, any debts owed on the income-contingent loans are cancelled upon death.
 
Mr Norton has suggested debts only be recovered from estates worth more than $100,000.

It's now rare for people to die before paying off their student loans.

However, new modelling from Curtin University's National Centre for Student Equity in Higher Education says the government's plans to deregulate university fees and charge compound interest on student loans could mean students had debts for longer.

"Fewer students will be expected to pay off their debt in full in their lifetime," the report, released on Thursday, says.

A student who graduates with a $50,000 HECS-HELP debt would have to earn an average of $80,000 a year to pay off the loan before retirement.

This assumes they would be in full-time work with no breaks, regular wage growth and a final salary well above $80,000.

A student who earned an averages of less than $80,000 a year throughout their working life would still have a debt when they turned 70, the modelling shows.


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2 min read
Published 29 May 2014 8:32am
Updated 29 May 2014 8:35am
Source: AAP, SBS

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