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There is a lot to take in this week. There is a lot to do because a lot of change is coming.
\\nBut one of the starker moments was when we asked the university people how it was that we are not getting the number of offshore students the way they are in Australia?
\\nAs it turns out, Australia is up over 30%, so much so they are looking to put a cap on it.
\\nHere, it\'s only a 15% increase. This was a $5 billion industry before our approach to Covid wrecked it.
\\nAdmission number one from the universities was that we were too slow to open. Those that did got the students.
\\nAdmission number two was when we did open the visa processing it was too slow. People apply in multiple countries and those who work fast, get the rewards.
\\nAdmission number three was about the M\\u0101orification of the system. There was some push back from the universities, with some suggesting this could have been a bonus. Fair enough, but also an admission that university education is global and M\\u0101ori culture, unless you specifically want it, is not conducive to global qualifications.
\\nSo, in a series of fairly simple questions and answers, we got a frighteningly clear picture of what has happened.
\\nAnd what has happened is we have blown it.
\\nYou can also toss in the downtown Auckland problem, where most of the accommodation is taken up by 501\'s and emergency housing, which means there is nowhere to live, and even if you do get a place, you\'ll have trouble in the neighbourhood.
\\nPart of this week\'s lift in spirit about the place is a reaction to the realisation that this past six years for too many has been a mess, or if not a mess, a nightmare.
\\nEducation has been crushed by a combination of ideology and ineptitude.
\\nCovid, and the way we ran it, has seemingly permanently changed the way the world sees us. It\'s not just university, my suspicion is it\'s in tourism as well and is why the bounce back has been nothing like the bounce back they have seen offshore.
\\nOnce again, it will be borders, visas, marketing and of course the now infamous entry to the country - Auckland Airport.
\\nIt is only once a Government goes that those like the universities lift their heads up, look for clear air and provide what turned out to be a damning and also astonishing account of just how bad it has been.
\\nThe trouble is the worse it is, the harder it is to fix.
\\nBut there is upside. So far the new lot look at least like they are determined to get the repair work started.
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