刚刚清静了几周没有新的移民政策公布,今晨就看到如下这条让众多人忐忑不安的信息,会计专业是否能够继续在职业提名清单上将成为未来几个月成千上万人关注的话题,继续关注中.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/higher-education/change-in-migration-list-adds-up-to-fear/story-e6frgcjx-1226559548412
UNIVERSITIES fear another crash in international enrolments as a debate rages about whether accountants should stay on a key migration priority list.
The federal government and the Finance Sector Union say Australia is awash with overseas-born accountants.
They say the profession should be removed from the 192-strong Skilled Occupation List, which governs eligibility for independent skilled migration.
But accountancy bodies say demand for accountants is outstripping supply, while institutions fear the move could jeopardise up to $2.5 billion in revenue.
They fear a re-run of 2009, when skilled migration reforms precipitated a downturn that has stripped $3bn a year from education exports.
Latest figures suggest about 28,000 foreigners study accountancy at degree level, representing 12 per cent of about 230,000 overseas higher education enrolments.
But the International Education Association of Australia said far more were at risk.
It said accountancy was effectively interchangeable with the broader field of management and commerce, which attracts one in two international higher education students.
"Many segue into accounting once they find their feet and work out the finance and tax systems," said IEAA executive director Phil Honeywood.
"Accounting is the professional end game of a business degree."
With international higher education tuition fees totalling $5bn a year, accountancy alone could be bringing in between $600 million and $2.5bn in fees.
The Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations said qualified accountants are in surplus and that all three categories - general, management and taxation accountants - should be removed from the Skilled Occupation List.
"Employer sponsored migration is more appropriate to meet labour market needs," it said.
Mr Honeywood said the move would create "enormous perception problems. It will indicate that Australia doesn't need any more accountants.
"Students who had hoped to get employer sponsorship will no longer see us as a study destination."
Monash University demographer Bob Birrell said Australia hosted about 60,000 25 to 34-year-old foreigners with management and commerce degrees. Just 30 per cent worked in management or professional positions, compared to 67 per cent of their domestic equivalents.
"We do have a very substantial stock of these people in Australia," he said.
Tomorrow bureaucrats, the FSU, business deans, private colleges, peak industry bodies and representatives of the big four accountancy firms will thrash the issue out at a Canberra focus group convened by the Australian Workforce and Productivity Agency.
AWPA reviews the Skilled Occupation List annually and proposes changes to the federal government.
It has flagged accounting as an occupation being considered for removal.
It expects to forward its advice to the Immigration Minister in March or April, with the new list likely to apply from early July. AWPA chief executive Robin Shreeve said people shouldn't jump to conclusions about the new list. "We put a lot of research into this and we do a lot of data mining," he said.
Mr Shreeve said tomorrow's meeting demonstrated that AWPA had an open mind and was "exploring every avenue".
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