Australians Working Overseas To Repay HECS Debt



Tens of thousands of Australians living overseas will no longer be able to avoid paying off their student loans, under new measures to be announced in the Federal budget.

 

Education Minister Christopher Pyne said from 2017, Australians living overseas will be legally obliged to repay their HECS and HELP debts.

 

New legislation will target those who have been living abroad for more than six months and who are earning more than $53,000 a year.

 

Mr Pyne said changes will make the system fairer and are expected to raise more than $140 million for the Government over 10 years.

 

"Currently, because graduates living overseas don't have to do an Australian tax return, there is no way to know if they are earning above the threshold that triggers HECS repayments and many get off scot-free," he said in a statement.

 

"Others come back to a debt that has been accruing interest at CPI rates while they are away.

 

"No government has ever tackled this obviously unfair situation - it's been in the too-hard basket. Our plan will enforce the same HECS repayment obligations on Australians living overseas that apply to those who remain on our shores."

 

He said the changes will include repayment obligations from July 1, 2017 based on 2016-17 income.

 

"There is no good reason why someone working as a banker in London or New York and earning over the threshold shouldn't pay back what they owe Australia," Mr Pyne said.

 

Under the current system, overseas debtors are able to make voluntary HECS repayments to the Australian Tax Office but are not under any legal obligation to do so.

 

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-05-02/australians-working-abroad-to-repay-student-loans/6439888

 

Not til 2017. I wonder how they'll go after them.

Message 1 of 27
Latest reply
26 REPLIES 26

Re: Australians Working Overseas To Repay HECS Debt


@lurker172602 wrote:

vicr3000
then never get a job and then get married and so it never gets paid back.



I did not know that.  Marriage negates your HECS debt.  Well, well, that's amazing. 


It does if you're a stay-at-home mum and then go on to a part -time job or stay under the threshhold.

Message 21 of 27
Latest reply

Re: Australians Working Overseas To Repay HECS Debt


@icyfroth wrote:

@lurker172602 wrote:

vicr3000
then never get a job and then get married and so it never gets paid back.



I did not know that.  Marriage negates your HECS debt.  Well, well, that's amazing. 


It does if you're a stay-at-home mum and then go on to a part -time job or stay under the threshhold.


And how many tertiary educated women do you know who do that?    How many graduates are paid so badly that they stay under the threshold?  Professional women are not often "stay at home" mums.

000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

Voltaire: “Those Who Can Make You Believe Absurdities, Can Make You Commit Atrocities” .
Message 22 of 27
Latest reply

Re: Australians Working Overseas To Repay HECS Debt


@***super_nova*** wrote:

@icyfroth wrote:

@lurker172602 wrote:

vicr3000
then never get a job and then get married and so it never gets paid back.



I did not know that.  Marriage negates your HECS debt.  Well, well, that's amazing. 


It does if you're a stay-at-home mum and then go on to a part -time job or stay under the threshhold.


And how many tertiary educated women do you know who do that?    How many graduates are paid so badly that they stay under the threshold?  Professional women are not often "stay at home" mums.


I'd say a fair few. You think there is a high-paying job for every single graduate that enters the workforce? 

Message 23 of 27
Latest reply

Re: Australians Working Overseas To Repay HECS Debt


@icyfroth wrote:

@***super_nova*** wrote:

@icyfroth wrote:

@lurker172602 wrote:

vicr3000
then never get a job and then get married and so it never gets paid back.



I did not know that.  Marriage negates your HECS debt.  Well, well, that's amazing. 


It does if you're a stay-at-home mum and then go on to a part -time job or stay under the threshhold.


And how many tertiary educated women do you know who do that?    How many graduates are paid so badly that they stay under the threshold?  Professional women are not often "stay at home" mums.


I'd say a fair few. You think there is a high-paying job for every single graduate that enters the workforce? 


$50 000 is NOT a highly paid job. 

"The ABS says the average individual wage in Australia in November 2013 was $57,980 before tax. The average full-time wage is $74,724 before tax.May 8, 2014"

000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

Voltaire: “Those Who Can Make You Believe Absurdities, Can Make You Commit Atrocities” .
Message 24 of 27
Latest reply

Re: Australians Working Overseas To Repay HECS Debt

Can someone enlighten me as to why the average wage would change that much in less than 12 months?

One of the young women I work with has a large HECS debt and her plan has been to live/work overseas so as not to have to pay back her debt (she has dual citizenship). This has thrown a spanner in the works for her, I like to think it's Karma for her Abbot vote 😄

Message 25 of 27
Latest reply

Re: Australians Working Overseas To Repay HECS Debt


@cosmosgrove wrote:

Can someone enlighten me as to why the average wage would change that much in less than 12 months?



They are 2 different figures; the first takes into account part time incomes, the second only people who work full time - at least that is what I made of it.  I assume they released the 1st figures late last year and now they released the second.

000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

Voltaire: “Those Who Can Make You Believe Absurdities, Can Make You Commit Atrocities” .
Message 26 of 27
Latest reply

Re: Australians Working Overseas To Repay HECS Debt


@***super_nova*** wrote:

@icyfroth wrote:

@***super_nova*** wrote:

@icyfroth wrote:

@lurker172602 wrote:

vicr3000
then never get a job and then get married and so it never gets paid back.



I did not know that.  Marriage negates your HECS debt.  Well, well, that's amazing. 


It does if you're a stay-at-home mum and then go on to a part -time job or stay under the threshhold.


And how many tertiary educated women do you know who do that?    How many graduates are paid so badly that they stay under the threshold?  Professional women are not often "stay at home" mums.


I'd say a fair few. You think there is a high-paying job for every single graduate that enters the workforce? 


$50 000 is NOT a highly paid job. 

"The ABS says the average individual wage in Australia in November 2013 was $57,980 before tax. The average full-time wage is $74,724 before tax.May 8, 2014"



@***super_nova*** wrote:

@icyfroth wrote:

@***super_nova*** wrote:

@icyfroth wrote:

@lurker172602 wrote:

vicr3000
then never get a job and then get married and so it never gets paid back.



I did not know that.  Marriage negates your HECS debt.  Well, well, that's amazing. 


It does if you're a stay-at-home mum and then go on to a part -time job or stay under the threshhold.


And how many tertiary educated women do you know who do that?    How many graduates are paid so badly that they stay under the threshold?  Professional women are not often "stay at home" mums.


I'd say a fair few. You think there is a high-paying job for every single graduate that enters the workforce? 


$50 000 is NOT a highly paid job. 

"The ABS says the average individual wage in Australia in November 2013 was $57,980 before tax. The average full-time wage is $74,724 before tax.May 8, 2014"


What a stonkingly irrelevant post. The government obviously deem $53.345 to be an average wage for the threshhold over which the HECS debt must be repaid.

Message 27 of 27
Latest reply