homeeducation NewsAustralia: International students flock back only to face housing struggles worse than pre COVID

Australia: International students flock back only to face housing struggles worse than pre-COVID

The rental housing crisis means the circumstances of international students in need of housing are likely worse now than in late 2019.

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By PTI Jan 11, 2023 12:57:26 PM IST (Published)

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Australia: International students flock back only to face housing struggles worse than pre-COVID
Australia is welcoming back international students in much greater numbers this year. Some predict new enrolments in 2023 could even be higher than the pre-COVID record in 2019. Student visa applications in the second half of 2022 were up 40 percent on the same period in 2019.

The downside is that many of these students are likely to struggle to find affordable and adequate accommodation. They are facing record low private rental vacancy rates and higher rents than before the pandemic.
Redfern Legal Centre’s International Student Legal Service NSW has been assisting international students for over a decade. Its senior solicitor, Sean Stimson, told The Conversation: The tenancy situation facing international students in the second half of 2022 – including illegal evictions and illegal rent increases – is the worst I’ve seen. We are increasingly seeing international students who are occupying substandard, illegal accommodation, exposing themselves to dangerous environments.
To make matters worse, a number of universities have been selling off a proportion of their student housing in response to falls in revenue during the pandemic. For example, in 2021, University of Technology Sydney sold three buildings with 428 beds for AUD 95 million to Scape, the largest provider in Australia’s AUD 20 billion purpose-built student housing sector.
In some cases, this has made student accommodation more costly. Rents are typically equivalent to, or even higher, than rents in the wider private rental market.
Like any group, students’ financial resources vary greatly. However, little was known about these inequalities and their impacts on international students’ housing and everyday living.
The Conversation's recently published study, involving more than 7,000 international students, shows many were struggling financially even before the post-COVID rental crisis. They suffered great anxiety about finding the money to pay the rent and worried about becoming homeless.
They also found food insecurity was common among these students. More than one in five had gone without meals. Similar numbers were unable to heat or cool their home adequately.
What did the study look at?
To study students’ experience of financial hardship or precarity, The Conversation used a scale of seven financial stress indicators from the Australian Bureau of Statistics. They added a new item, “Could not afford to buy prescribed textbooks”.
Their research project surveyed students who depended on private rental accommodation in Sydney and Melbourne, Australia’s top destinations for international students, in late 2019.
The sample was drawn from all three post-secondary sectors. It included ten universities, 24 vocational colleges, seven English language colleges and two foundation course institutions.
They divided the 7,084 valid responses to the survey into four groups: secure (no financial stress indicators), moderately precarious (one to two indicators), highly precarious (three to five) and extremely precarious (six to eight).
Some 44 percent of students were secure, 31 percent were moderately precarious, 20 percent were highly precarious and 5 percent were extremely precarious.
How many students are struggling financially?
A large proportion of students were struggling, as the chart below shows. Some 21 percent reported going without meals in the past 12 months. And 22 percent were unable to heat or cool their home adequately.
How affordable is students’ housing?
More than half of the students classed as highly and extremely precarious (53 percent and 58 percent respectively) said they could not “easily afford housing costs”. This compared to 34 percent of moderately precarious and 17 percent of secure students.
Paying the rent was a source of much anxiety across all groups. Some 64 per cent of highly precarious students and 81 percent of extremely precarious students said they often worried about paying the rent each week, compared to 38 percent of moderately precarious students and only 16 percent of secure students.
Worryingly, 70 percent of extremely precarious students reported going without necessities such as food so they could pay the rent. This proportion drops to 40 percent for highly precarious students, 16 percent for moderately precarious students and 11 percent for secure students.
Many international students have a job and paid work is strongly related to precarity. A large percentage of extremely precarious students and highly precarious students (87 percent and 70 percent respectively) agreed having paid work was essential to pay the rent. In contrast, half of moderately precarious students and a quarter of secure students said they needed paid work to pay the rent.
Severe financial need may drive students into accepting underpaid or unsafe work.
How secure do students feel about their housing?
High rents are only part of the housing insecurity problem. When asked whether they worry about being told to leave their accommodation at short notice, just over half of extremely precarious students said yes, as did 31 percent of high precarious students. Only 18 percent of moderately precarious students and 11 percent of secure students had similar worries.
A particularly worrying finding was that seven in ten extremely precarious students and just over one in three highly precarious students had felt in the past year that they could become homeless. Only 13 percent of moderately precarious students and 6 percent of secure students had this concern.
Looking ahead
The rental housing crisis means the circumstances of international students in need of housing are likely worse now than in late 2019.
The risks are particularly high for students from poorer backgrounds or countries. Policymakers and education providers must pay more attention to the issue of housing students who come to study in Australia.
This article was originally published by Sydney-based publication 'The Conversation.'

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