Australia’s parliament has passed a law cutting student loan balances by 20%, erasing more than A$16 billion — roughly $10.3 billion U.S. — in debt for three million Australians. The legislation, passed Thursday, fulfills one of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s most prominent election promises and delivers the largest student debt relief measure in the country’s history.
At a glance
- Student debt relief: Three million Australians will see their HECS-HELP loan balances cut by one-fifth, with the changes backdated to June 1, 2025 C.E. — before loans were indexed 3.2% for inflation.
- Average loan reduction: A university graduate carrying the average loan of A$27,600 will have A$5,520 wiped from their balance, with no application or action required.
- Repayment threshold: The minimum income at which graduates must begin repaying rises from A$54,435 to A$67,000, reducing pressure on low-income earners immediately.
Why this passed now
Timing and demographics drove this bill to the top of Labor’s legislative agenda. Millennials and Generation Z made up 43% of the 18 million Australians enrolled to vote in May’s general election — outnumbering Baby Boomers as an electoral bloc for the first time. Labor seized on that shift, framing student debt reduction as a direct response to intergenerational inequality and cost-of-living pressure.
The party won re-election with one of the largest parliamentary majorities in Australia’s history. This bill is the first piece of legislation the Albanese government passed after returning to office — a deliberate signal about priorities.
“Getting an education shouldn’t mean a lifetime of debt,” Albanese said in a statement after the vote.
The cost of living angle
Australia, like many wealthy nations, has faced sustained pressure on household budgets from inflation, rising rents, and stagnant wages growth. For graduates in their 20s and 30s, HECS-HELP debt — Australia’s income-contingent student loan system — compounds those pressures. Each year, outstanding balances are indexed to inflation, meaning a debt can grow even while a borrower is making regular repayments.
The backdating provision addresses this directly. By applying the 20% cut before the June 2025 C.E. indexation, the government prevented a year’s worth of inflation from being added to balances before the relief took effect.
Education Minister Jason Clare described the law as lifting “a weight” off young Australians. “Young Australians don’t always see something for them on the ballot paper, but they did this year and they voted for it in their millions,” he said at a press conference. “And we’re repaying the trust that these young Australians have placed in us.”
What it means for access to education
Australia’s HECS-HELP system, introduced in 1989 C.E., was designed to make university accessible by deferring tuition costs until graduates earn above a repayment threshold. For decades it was seen as a model for equitable higher education funding. But as loan balances grew faster than wages and indexation added thousands of dollars per year to outstanding debts, critics argued the system had drifted from its founding purpose.
The new threshold increase — from A$54,435 to A$67,000 — is particularly significant for graduates in lower-paid sectors like early childhood education, community services, and the arts, where starting salaries often hover near the old threshold. Under the previous rules, those workers were required to begin repaying debt from income that left little margin for rent or savings.
Advocates for higher education access have broadly welcomed the bill, while some economists have noted that broader structural reforms — including to how tuition fees are set and indexed — remain unaddressed. The 20% cut is a significant relief measure, but it does not change the underlying trajectory of debt growth for future students.
A generational shift in politics
The passage of this law reflects something larger than one policy win. When younger voters become the dominant demographic in an electorate, the issues that have historically been treated as peripheral — housing affordability, climate, student debt — can move to the center of political competition.
Australia’s result adds to a pattern visible in several democracies where younger generations are voting in higher numbers and reshaping electoral outcomes. Whether this translates into durable policy change beyond election cycles remains an open question — and one worth watching.
For now, three million Australians will begin the next financial year carrying less debt than they did the week before. For many, that is not an abstraction. It is the difference between staying afloat and falling behind.
The law also sets a precedent. Other countries with income-contingent loan systems — including the United Kingdom and New Zealand — are watching how Australia’s approach plays out, both politically and fiscally. Critics will argue the cost is too high; supporters will point to the human cost of the alternative.
Either way, the bill is law. The debt is gone.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Reuters via Yahoo News
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Alzheimer’s risk cut in half by drug in landmark prevention trial
- Indigenous land rights at COP30: 160 million hectares recognized
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Australia
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