What is the Gonski 2.0 plan for schools funding?

The Turnbull government has unveiled its plan for Gonski 2.0 - a revamp of Labor's schools funding plan.

File image of Minister for Education Simon Birmingham and Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull

File image of Minister for Education Simon Birmingham and Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull Source: AAP

The plan for school funding

  • More than 99 per cent of schools will see a year-on-year increase in funding, and on average per-student funding will grow 4.1 per cent a year over a decade.
  • Federal funding will grow from $17.5 billion in 2017 to $22.1 billion by 2021, and $30.6 billion by 2027.
  • The per student base amount in 2018 will be $10,953 for primary students and $13,764 for secondary school students.
  • Ends 27 different school funding agreements the coalition inherited from Labor in 2013.
  • Replaces them with a single, national needs-based, sector-blind funding model that will deliver across government and non-government schools.
  • Additional support for students from low socio-economic backgrounds, those with a disability, who come from non-English-speaking backgrounds, smaller rural and regional remote schools.
  • Transition to pay 80 per cent of the Gonski-based schooling resource standard for non-government schools - up from around 77 per cent now.
  • Federal contribution to government schools will increase from 17 per cent now to 20 per cent of the schooling resource standard by 2020.
  • A small number of schools - about two dozen - will experience "some negative" growth in their funding.
  • Businessman David Gonski, who led the 2011 review, has agreed to head a new review and provide high-level advice to the government.

The reaction

"It's a smoke and mirrors, pea and thimble effort to hide the fact that instead of cutting $30 billion from schools over the decade, this government will cut $22 billion from schools over the decade." - Labor education spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek.

"People are sick of the argy-bargy between the states and the Federal government, they're sick of the hyper-partisan fights between the government and the opposition, we've got to get the politics out of this." - Greens education spokeswoman Sarah Hanson-Young.

"It abandons a mechanism that ensures resources are distributed fairly and according to need among schools that belong to a single Catholic schools authority." - National Catholic Education Commission acting executive director Danielle Cronin.

"The core principles ... at first blush, seem like they're exactly the right ones." - Grattan Institute's school education program director Pete Goss.

"The government appears to be focusing on the apparently easier task of picking on a few schools which probably are overfunded but it's only a very small amount of the overall school budget." - Centre for Independent Studies Education policy analyst Blaise Joseph.


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3 min read
Published 3 May 2017 8:28am
Updated 3 May 2017 10:29am
Source: AAP


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