Australia election 2025 live: Dutton says he will cut 80,000 international students; Labor plans to cut home battery costs | Australian election 2025


Dutton says he will cut 80,000 international students, citing housing demand

Elections are – at least in part – battles over whose message wins the day. And today’s message battle is between solar batteries and international students.

Peter Dutton has announced today that under the Coalition, foreign student intakes will be cut by 80,000, in a plan aimed at reducing demand for housing.

The Daily Telegraph reports that the move will see a percentage cap – believed to be around 25% – set on universities, VET and the higher education sector, and will reduce the number of new international students from 320,000 in 2023 to about 240,000.

Dutton said on Sunday morning that the number of international students had contributed to driving up of rents, particularly in Sydney and Melbourne.

Students on campus
The Coalition says it would cap student intake numbers at 30,000 lower than Labor. Photograph: Jacobs Stock Photography Ltd/Getty Images

Speaking about the announcement in Melbourne this morning, Dutton said:

International student numbers are up by 65% under this government over the last 12 months. We [will] put in place a cap which will be 30,000 lower than what Labor has in place or 80,000 lower than what the numbers were just a couple of years ago.

This is a very significant step that we’re taking. It is all about making sure that we do what we can to help young Australians get into home ownership more quickly and how we can help with the rental crisis that Labor’s created as well.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Coalition says its foreign student numbers would be 30,000 lower than Labor’s

We’ve received some more details of the Coalition’s plan on cutting international students.

The Coalition says that under its plan, there will be at most 115,000 overseas student commencements each year at publicly funded universities and at most 125,000 in the VET, private university and non-university higher education sectors.

They say this will result in a reduction of more than 80,000 in annual new overseas student commencements compared with 2023 levels; a reduction in at least 30,000 new overseas student commencements each year compared to Labor’s 2025 allocation.

Keen followers of this debate (or blog) will recall that the Coalition blocked Labor’s plan to cap international student numbers at the end of last year.

The Coalition announcement today says that to achieve the reduction at public universities, a percentage cap will be applied that is is expected to be around 25% and said they expected it to “overwhelmingly affect” metropolitan, rather than regional universities, in particular the Group of Eight universities, which the Coalition says “have admitted excessive numbers of international students”.

The Coalition is also committing to:

  • conduct a rapid review into the Temporary Graduate Visas (subclass 485) to address the misuse of post-study work arrangements as a way to gain access to the Australian labour market and as a pathway to permanent migration

  • increase the student visa application charge to $5,000 for Group of Eight universities and $2,500 for remaining international students. A new charge of $2,500 will be introduced for students who wish to change education providers.

Share

Updated at 


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *