Australia considers waiving students' debts

IANS  |  Canberra 

The is considering waiving debts of students who unknowingly took on loans, authorities said on Monday.

The federal Student Ombudsman has received more than 5,000 complaints from former students of private colleges about substandard or being ripped off, reports

The complaints were linked to Vocational Educational Training (VET) FEE-HELP, a controversial scheme that was scrapped by the government early 2017.

Under the programme, students who took out a loan to study were granted almost unregulated access to government subsidies -- incentivzing colleges to enrol as many students as possible.

A majority of complainants to the Student Ombudsman said they were unaware that they would incur a when they signed up for a private college course.

Gerard Brody, of the Consumer Action Law Centre, welcomed any initiative that would help students who had been conned into taking out the

VET FEE-HELP has been replaced by VET Student Loans which caps loans based on the cost of the course.

The total amount of the debts that would be wiped under the government proposal is unknown but reported that the believed over A$1 billion ($730 million) in loans would never be repaid.

--IANS

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First Published: Mon, August 20 2018. 09:22 IST