The University of Canberra (UC) is among nine universities that today launched the 2050 Alliance to build a better future for students and communities across Australia.
The Alliance is committed to achieving the national goal of increasing tertiary attainment to at least 80% of the working-age population by 2050, to ensure that all Australians have the opportunity to obtain the knowledge and skills they will need for a brighter future. Reaching this target promises to add $240 billion to Australia’s economy by 2050.
This national uplift will require expanding access to higher education for under-represented communities, supporting more students to succeed and sharing the knowledge and research that will power innovation. Across Australia, the universities in the 2050 Alliance are embedded in the communities that will determine whether we achieve these national targets. There is no time to waste – the decisions we make today are essential for delivering intergenerational equity and productivity for future generations of Australians.
The Alliance was launched by Minister for Education the Hon Jason Clare MP, who said “almost one in two young people in their 20s and their 30s have a university degree today. But not everywhere. Not in our outer suburbs and not in regional Australia. The 2050 Alliance will help change that.
“The Universities Accord sets an ambitious target for 80 per cent of the workforce to have a tertiary qualification by 2050.
“2050 Alliance Universities are going to do a lot of heavy lifting in getting us there.”
Professor The Honourable Bill Shorten, Vice-Chancellor and President of UC said that the time was right for universities to come together with a clear focus on public good and UC is central to this national effort.
"As a 2050 Alliance member, UC is focussed on making university study more accessible, flexible and affordable by recognising prior learning and experience and establishing VET partnerships and tangible pathways to university that are achievable,” Professor Shorten said.
"As a united entity, we are better positioned to take a positive step towards supporting Australia's workforce needs, boosting productivity and delivering bold and practical research that empowers communities and strengthens society for the future.
“But, ambition must be matched by investment through long-term national mechanisms such as my proposal for the establishment of a sovereign education wealth fund to ensure every Australian has the opportunity to learn, reskill and succeed. I believe that’s how we can turn aspiration into opportunity at scale.”
Joining UC as the founding members of the 2050 Alliance are the Australian Catholic University, Flinders University, Griffith University, James Cook University, La Trobe University, Murdoch University, Victoria University and Western Sydney University.
Together, they currently teach more than 285,000 students across more than 65 campuses in inner city, suburban, regional and remote Australia.
2050 Alliance CEO Paul Harris said that the work of the group would be characterised by constructive engagement with government to achieve long-lasting reform.
“We are already working with the new Australian Tertiary Education Commission on our shared goal of a bigger and fairer university system that sets Australia up for the future,” he said. “Our Alliance will be a leading positive voice for higher education and research policy that benefits all Australians.”