Neoliberalism and Inequality in Higher Education
Dzuriyatun Toyibah
1
1
Universitas Islam Negeri Syarif Hidayatullah Jakarta, Indonesia
Keywords: Commodification, Internationalization, Audit Culture, and Inequality
Abstract: Neoliberalism has substantial impact on creating a market-oriented higher education system and as
consequence it requires greater accountability, quality, and efficiency. Neo-liberalism in higher education
has been implemented in some principles such as commodification, internationalization, and quality
assurance. The university shifts into providing services, research, and labour to the industrial sector of the
economy. Drawing from the existing literature, this paper discusses the consequences of neo-liberalism,
especially to maintain inequality within higher education systems observedin some countries, including in
Indonesia.There are two neoliberalism elements (commodification and quality assurance) that have been
regarded as rather commonplace within the Indonesian higher education system. Contrarily,
internationalisation, despite its mounting presence, is still scarcely discussed. The issue of inequality in
Indonesian higher education may be traced backed to the reality in which there is a dual system of religious
vs secular public higher education and the status of private vs public higher education institution. The three
neoliberalism principles above will create immense inequality between higher education institutions,
subsequently, students attending the top public secular higher education institution and private secular ones
will enjoy better quality of higher education facility than students attending public religious and private
secular or religious universities with lower accreditation rank.
1 INTRODUCTION
Liberalism, both classical and neo-liberal, assumes
that the economic character of being profit oriented
is the main character of human being. The difference
between classical liberalism and neoliberalism is a
shift from the concept of exchange to the concept of
competition requires market intervention (Read,
2009). In other words, neoliberalism applies
capitalism principles and it is characterised by the
use of state power to intervene in the market
(Brewis, 2018). This has significant impact on the
academic environment, especially because
universities must conform to the notion of rational
economy, accordingly, the work environment in
universities would be subject to external
competition.
This paper will discuss those three principles as
they have been practiced in a number of liberal
countries and how they have been adapted in
Indonesia’s higher education policy. Additionally,
this article discusses the issue of inequality in higher
education under the neo liberal policy, and it is
structured as follows. The first section focuses on
the introduction of the study and overview of
neoliberalism in higher education and social justice.
The next and final section discuss neo liberalism and
social justice in Indonesia and conclusion.
2 HIGHER EDUCATION AND
COMMODIFICATION
The first influence of neo-liberalism in universities
discussed in this paper is the commodification of
higher education. This term has been used to
describe the fact that higher education has become
an economic commodity. As a consequence of
higher education commodification, universities must
emphasize to implement the principles of efficiency,
accountability, income generation, and intensify job
training, in which students are seen as customers
with the goal of improving social capital and human
capital (Saunders, 2014). The principle of efficiency
in universities in western countries is manifested by
prioritizing the recruitment of non-permanent
academic staff, university decisions are made in a
hierarchical manner by reducing the influence of
1590
Toyibah, D.
Neoliberalism and Inequality in Higher Education.
DOI: 10.5220/0009932415901597
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Recent Innovations (ICRI 2018), pages 1590-1597
ISBN: 978-989-758-458-9
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
faculty and students, and giving more priority to
science compared to the field of humanities and the
arts. Faculties must also possess an economic
function, wherein research can generate income,
education process and services can generate profit.
Academics are also positioned similarly as company
workers that must contribute productively to the
organisation.
Another consequence of higher education
commodification is that the role of the university
shifts into providing services, research, and labour to
the industrial sector of the economy (Washburn,
2006). The success of higher education is measured
quantitatively from the number of students that the
higher education system can recruit, the number of
graduates who obtain high-paying job, and income
earned from research and consultancy as deciding
factors that can increase the competitiveness of
higher education institutions. As of current, funding
of universities are mostly obtained from private
sources, ranging from domestic and international
student fees to donations because public funds have
been restricted. If the students are considered as
customers, the lecturers are assumed to be workers
who the management needs to monitor and control
(Ryan, 2012).
3 GLOBALIZATION AND
INTERNATIONALIZATION
Meek (2002) states that internationalisation has long
been a part of higher education practice, particularly
in Europe. Nevertheless, internationalisation has
only recently emerged to be under more formal
coordination. In the period between 1980s and
1990s, market-entrepreneurial principles replaced
traditional structures and transformed public sector
institutions, including higher education in Anglo-
Saxon countries. According to Amaral (2008), the
transformation of higher education in developed
countries observed to have taken place in the last
decades is a part of Western society’s restructuring
process. Pertaining to this matter, concepts from the
private sectors such as efficiency, utility, public
accountability, and enterprise have replaced
traditional values. New public management (NPM)
has been introduced, in which higher education
institutions are adopting private-sector techniques
(Amaral. 2008).
The introduction of NPM in universities was
subsequently followed by the introduction of
research funding systems that are based on
performances. Hicks (2012) observed that 14
countries have introduced this system under varying
names. The purpose of the funding, in general, is to
maintain research excellence by responding to
international competition, which demands high
scientific quality. Unit analysis, methods of
measurement, frequency, and census periods of
evaluation for performance based research funding
are not the same in every country. Hicks (8) argues
that, generally speaking, research is not
implemented individually or within department
levels, it is conducted by a group/cluster instead, yet
a small number of countries, such as New Zealand
and Spain, individually evaluate the research.
4 QUALITY ASSURANCE
Quality assurance emerged as a special focus of
regulation in the higher education sector at the end
of the 19th century when the first accreditation
organization appeared in the United States (US).
Moreover, quality assurance had begun to develop in
Western Europe, Australia, Canada and New
Zealand. Beginning in the late 1960s to the 1980s,
these issues were internalized within the government
and they were managed through traditional
bureaucratic arrangements, although it was
accompanied with increasing pressure for greater
accountability, efficiency, and transparency of the
university sector, and this was driven by
conservative government elections in various Anglo-
Saxon countries in the late 1970s. Key changes to
traditional oversight mechanisms occurred in the UK
with the publication of a White Paper by the
government in 1991, Higher Education: A New
Framework, which suggested not only the removal
of binary divisions between universities and
polytechnics (allowing the later to assume a
university degree) but the establishment of a new
Higher Educational Quality Council (HEQC).
Based on a survey about quality assurance
frameworks in France, Belgium and the Netherlands,
Neave (2004) concludes that the purpose of quality
assurance has not been agreed upon. However,
quality assurance has become a basic principle of
neoliberalism in higher education, and under
neoliberal management, the universities are
subjected to mechanism under performance based
evaluation. Evaluation and assessment relating to the
performance of a university and its academic staff
are considered as strategies to ensure the quality of
higher education. Academic life is shaped and
framed by performance evaluation and assessment
on research and the outputs of academic activities
such as awards, grant, consultation and the impact of
research, and the quality of teaching. These aspects
of academic performance are highly crucial to
Neoliberalism and Inequality in Higher Education
1591
determine the recruitment process, academic career
advancement, and promotion.
Normatively, universities are regarded as
institutions that provide academic freedom, freedom
of thought and expression, heterodoxy and
exploration to create new knowledge. However,
practically speaking, colleges must adapt to a series
of regulatory regimes that seek to manage, direct,
and control the sector in ways that serve the interests
of the state and economy by applying principles of
efficiency, value, and performance
5 NEOLIBERALISM IN HIGHER
EDUCATION AND
INEQUALITY
It is suggested in the theoretical literature that one of
the vital means in which competition and the
resultant inequality have been produced in the
academy under neoliberalism is through the ranking
and audit processes (Berg, 2016). Our well-being in
higher education is significantly impacted by these
ranking and audit systems, and their resultant
production of inequality and predacity. According to
a number of studies in the west, neo-liberalism has
impacted on Western countries’ strengthening
inequality, which has been existent even prior to the
period of neoliberalism. Bagilhole (2001) believes
that higher education has always been the arena for
middle-and white-skinned males bearing unequal
cooperation mechanisms. The academic world has
developed into an extremely competitive domain
with constant conditions in which academics may be
categorized into two differing groups: academic
groups that can exist in the academic world and
those who do not exist. Under the neoliberalism
system, the determining measures of success in
academic care are becoming more obvious. Those
who are considered as being unproductive will
subsequently be eliminated of their own accord. In
the western neo-liberalism system, the academic
community is no longer a class category as it has
turned into a profession that underscores personal
competence (Read 2009).
By the end of the 1990s, protests against neo-
liberalism, commodification, and commercialisation
of higher education had become exceedingly
expansive so that the development of market
capitalism was not as determined as it was expected
to be. Several numbers of leading higher education
institutions around the world responded to The
World Trade Organisation’s (WTO) GATT treaty by
signing a declaration. The basic principles of the
declaration are: First, higher education is a public
interest, not a commodity; Second, higher education
must be organised by a competent body designed by
any country; Third, higher education is aimed at
exporting high quality education, not undermining
developing countries; Fourth, higher education
internationalisation should be based on high quality
academic service; Five, quality must be the key
objective for both domestic and international
education regardless of the way of delivering higher
education; Sixth, a rules-based regime must guide
international co-operation; Seventh, higher education
is not similar to other commercial parts of the
service sector; Eighth, the interdependency of public
and private higher education; and finally, ninth and
tenth are cautiousness and transparency (Meek,
2002).
Nevertheless, a number of significant changes
had occurred in the academic environment in liberal
countries during the period of neo-liberal policy and
global markets. As an example, trend showed
decreasing public funding despite the fact that
universities were being publicly funded. As a result,
universities were urged to increase the funding they
acquire from the private sector. Many universities
had subsequently choose to employ more part-time
or contractual staff to address the issue of
progressively increasing operational costs. Such
strategy was selected as it was considered to be more
cost effective and less expensive because the pay for
a part-time staff member covers only one academic
course for one activity, and they were only paid for
their teaching time. Another change that took place
during that period is that corporate-style managers
and professional administrators had consequently
taken control of the decision making process in
universities, while formerly, in the past decades, it
was the academicians who led in the decision
making process. Universities are currently expected
to adopt business like or corporate practices. There
are now non-academic professions involved in
universities, which include activities such as
marketing, finance, student services, human
resources, and quality assurance. This may actually
providea chance for administrators working in
universities to build a career path, although it may
simultaneously reduce freedom and cause hyper-
bureaucracy for academics. Such managerial
practice is considered as justifiable by the crises or
budget shortfalls which undoubtedly require
professionals, such as accountants (Baker, 2012). In
addition to that, the use of new electronic procedures
in recruiting academiciansenables candidates from
around the world to apply for those roles. Aside
from the expectation that new academic recruits
have completed their doctoral degree, their entry
qualification put emphasis on teaching and research
experiences, as well as peer review publication.
ICRI 2018 - International Conference Recent Innovation
1592
Productivity, profile, and the national and
international reputation of the university have
become regarded by both the government and public
universities as indicators pertaining to the quality of
higher education (Baker, 2012).
6 HIGHER EDUCATION,
NEOLIBERALISM AND
INEQUALITY IN HIGHER
EDUCATION IN INDONESIA
Academic systems applied in numerous developing
countries, such as Indonesia, are different to that
found in liberal and industrialised countries, where
more complex systems are developed. Even so, we
can trace back some aspects of these academic
systems in Asian countries to the Western academic
system, such as the patterns of institutional
governance, the rhythm of academic life, the ethos
of the academic profession, ideas about science,
examination and assessment (Altbach 1989: 3-4).
There are at least two significant elements that set
the stage for the emergence of universities in Asian
countries: first, the influence of foreign systems;
second, the spirit of indigenisation. In general, the
impact of Western academic systems has been of
utmost importance, due the influence of colonialism
throughout history. For instance, Dutch colonialism
has influenced Indonesia; whereas British
colonialism influences India, Malaysia, and
Singapore; while American and Spanish colonialism
has influenced the Philippines; and French
colonialism influences Vietnam. However, long
before the advent of Western colonisation, Asian
countries maintained a significant intellectual
tradition, such as the impact of Buddhism from
India, Islam from the Middle East, and
Confucianism from China (ibid).
However, in comparison to higher education
systems and academic career advancement of liberal
countries, Indonesia has developed quite a different
system of universities, academic life, and academic
careers. The current secular higher education system
is managed and governed under the Ministry of
Research & Technology and Higher Education
(MoRTHE) and the Ministry of Religious Affairs
(MoRA). In addition to this arrangement, the
education system is further separated into public and
private institutions (Wicaksono&Friawan, 2011).
Enrolments grew from less than 1 million pre-1990
to 2.68 million in 1995, and by a further million
again to 3.87 million in 2005 (14). Currently,
enrolments stand at 5.38 million (Pangkalan Data
Dikti [Indonesian Higher Education Database]
2016a) (Brewis, 2018).
Two aspects of neoliberalism (commodification
and quality assurance) have been considered quite
common within the higher education system in
Indonesia. On the other hand, internationalisation
remains to be rarely discussed. Commodification is
very close to the issue of inequality, while
accreditation and quality assurance are close to the
problem of job dissatisfaction among academic staff.
In 1999 and 2009 the Indonesian government issued
the following policies: BHMN/Badan Hukum Milik
Negara (State Owned Legal Entity) and BHP/Badan
Hukum Pendidikan (Education Legal Entity)
respectively. The government had reduced subsidies
and made four prominent public universities into
BHMNs (14). Commodification of higher education
is very clear because the policy allows university to
introduce a controversial strategy called a ‘special
track’ admission system (jalur khusus12). A
minority of students who pay dramatically higher
fees were guaranteed to be accepted at thosefour
prominent public universities. Cross-subsidy
strategy was applied by higher education institution
managers, therefore, the majority of students who
were selected on merit can pay less tuition (Brewis,
2018).However, this strategy hadput students from
lower socioeconomic backgrounds at a disadvantage
because they were only given a small proportion of
being accepted in those prominent public
universities. Later, in 2010, the Constitutional Court
declared the BHMN and BPH as unconstitutional,
yet Law 12/2012 on higher education reinstated the
policy and renamed the BHMN and BPH into
PTNBH/Perguruan Tinggi Negeri Berbadan Hukum
(State Higher Education Legal Entity).
The goal relating to accessibility and availability
has been addressed explicitly within Law 20/2003,
and it emphasizes the goal of improving equal
access to education. These discourses are based on
the constitutional aim to ‘develop the intellectual life
of the nation’ (mencerdaskan kehidupan bangsa),
and it is aligned to thePancasila. Chapter 5 of Law
20/2003 outlinesthe rights and obligations of
students wherein every student in every school/HEI
is eligible for (1) a scholarship –or (2) tuition fee
waivers– if their parents cannot afford to put them
through school/HEI and they are outstanding
student. The 2003 law mandates 20% of the
State/Regional budget to be allocated to education,
excluding salaries for teaching staff. Article 5 (Read,
2009) states that every citizen has anequal right to
access quality education. Another aspect to address
social justice for reducing inequality is that the
policy mentioned about eliminating discrimination
in all categories of higher education be it public,
private, religious, and secular. (2) However, the law
Neoliberalism and Inequality in Higher Education
1593
is considered to have adopted a neoliberalism stance
as it underscores efficiency and accountability in the
management of schools and universities.
In terms of accreditation, there is auditing
practice carried out by the National Accreditation
Board for Higher Education (BAN-PT) which
develops academic as well as managerial standards
and conducts audits for all study programs in
Indonesia. This institution has a very strong
legitimacy because the Education Act of 2012 HE
Law states that accreditation by BAN-PT is
mandatory, and without accreditation status,
universities are unable to publish diplomas, and the
degrees students attain will be considered invalid
even though they have completed their degree
(Rosser, 2015).
The quality assurance of higher education in
Indonesia is measured by quantitatively assessing
the success of higher education based on several
factors that are regarded as capable of increasing the
competitiveness of higher education institutions such
as the number of students who completed their study
on schedule, the GPA (Grade Point Average), the
number of alumni who obtained a job with good
salary, and income earned from research and
consultancy. Another aspect of accreditation and
quality of assurance is the assessment of academic
staff. In order to obtain a high accreditation score,
higher education institutions must employ and
promote their academic staff to reach certain criteria.
Assessment and monitoring of academic staff have
always been required not only for accreditation of
higher education institution but also for academic
staff promotion and remuneration. Under the new
system, called Beban Kerja Dosen or BKD
(academic staff obligation), academics are required
to fulfil all three activities ((Tri Darma Perguruan
Tinggi) as being eligible for the monthly incentive
requires them to follow the rules. Academic staff
performance will determine their individual as well
as the higher education institution performance.
In this regard, Gaus (2015) argues that
academics perceive negative advantages towards the
shift in accountability and quality assurance because
they are challenged by multiple roles and
responsibilities. Academics are increasingly subject
to administrative-related tasks because the system of
accreditation and quality assurance require them to
compile, scan, and upload files and document as
evidence for accomplishing their three functions
(teaching, research, and community engagement).
The lecture monitoring and assessment implemented
by the government have ruined the motivation to
accomplish their job. Some lecturers are worried
about being trapped in data manipulation practices to
meet the government’s requirement pertaining to
assessment and monitoring. The situation, which
may be described as being ‘over regulated’, has
made academic staff lose their critical thinking, and
they recently consider themselves as always being
the government’s object for‘character assassination’.
The inequality issue found in Indonesian higher
education may be traced back to the reality in which
there is a dual system applied in terms of
management by the ministry (religious higher
education under MORA and secular higher
education under MORTHE) and higher education
status (public vs private institution).Although
neoliberalism does not directly influence this factor,
the three neoliberalism principles (commodification,
internationalization, and quality assurance) will
create greater inequality not only between higher
educations but also in the quality of alumni from
those institutions.
Such dual system of secular and religious
universities in Indonesia can actually be traced back
to the Dutch colonial era in which Islamic education
alone was developing alongside the Dutch system.
During this era, the Dutch system education was
merely accessible to Europeans, leaving Islamic
schools as the only option for Indonesian natives. Ki
Hajar Dewantara, a leader of the upcoming national
movement established at the end of the 19
th
century
called Taman Siswa (McVey 1967), had proposed
an alternative education system different to that of
the Dutch. The basic concept was to introduce and
develop an Indonesian-culture-based education
system aimed at facilitating nationalism, advancing
principals of humanity, and providing freedom of
development for children.
Aside from the Dutch colonial system, the
Islamic education system had already existed in
Indonesia since the 17
th
century. Education has
always played a vital role in popularising and
maintaining the currently existing religions in
Indonesia, particularly for Muslims and Christians.
Nevertheless, the Christians find it easier adapting to
the modern education system the Dutch had
introduced. Jones (1976: 38) opined that it is less
difficult for Christianity to accept westernisation and
modernisation since both are interrelated, and
education is an inseparable piece of both elements. It
can, thus, be assumed that Christians are able to
easily adapt to public and secular schools. Even so,
the Christians have aggressively been establishing
private schools.
Meanwhile, the Muslim community had to
endure a rather lengthy process to accept the modern
education system. A crucial consideration should be
taken into account here, wherein the most vital
aspect of Islamic education is to attain total
submission to Alloh (God). The education system is
merely a tool for achieving that main objective.
According to Islamic teachings, knowledge can be
ICRI 2018 - International Conference Recent Innovation
1594
specified into two categories: revealed knowledge
through the Prophet Muhammad and scientific
knowledge acquiredvia scientific methods such as
observation and research (Zakaria 2007).
Concerning religious higher education, one of
the reasons for establishing Islamic higher education
institutions was the need for functional personnel at
the Ministry of Religious Affairs (MoRA). In
accordance with the dual system discourse applied to
primary and secondary education, the government
also implemented a dual system for universities. In
this case, the MoNE manages the following post-
secondary level organisations: Universities,
Academies, and Institutes; whereas, the MoRA
manages the following tertiary level institutions:
Sekolah Tinggi Agama Islam/STAIN (State of
Islamic Studies College), Institute Agama Islam
Negeri/IAIN (State Institute of Islamic Studies), and
Universitas Islam Negeri/UIN (State Islamic
University). This was initially named Akademi
Dinas Ilmu Agama (ADIA), but it is subsequently
referred to as PTAIN (Perguruan Tinggi Agama
Islam) (Zakaria, 2007).
In addition to the dual religious and secular
systems, Indonesian education is generally
maintained by the government for public schools,
while private schools are also available. Indonesian
higher education institutions are, thus, categorized
into public and private institutions, legally approved
since the 1950s and reinforced by Law 30, 1990
(Welch, 2007). The history of public universities can
be traced back to the founding of Gajah mada
University and the University of Indonesia in the
immediate post war period (1945 to 1950s). The
government initiated to establish the universities.
Upon Indonesia’s proclamation of independence,
Balai Perguruan Tinggi Indonesia (Home of Higher
Education of the Republic Indonesia) was
established in Jakarta. However, political instability
and intensifying conflict between the Dutch and
Indonesians forced the institution to relocate to
Yogyakarta, which was made into a temporary
capital during Jakarta’s reoccupation by the Dutch,
and subsequently to Klaten (a small town in central
Java). Given the reestablishment of Indonesia’s
sovereignty after the end of the seven-months
conflict, a regulation was issued by the government
concerning the higher education facilities in
Yogyakarta and Klaten to become Universitas
Negeri Gadjah Mada (Gadjah Mada State
University/UGM) (Cumming & Kasenda, 1989).
According to Hill and Wie (2013), private
universities are a recent phenomenon, although two
private universities, the Indonesian Islamic
University (UII) in Yogyakarta and National
University in Jakarta, were set up in 1949 as soon as
the Dutch colonials withdrew from Indonesia
(Welch 2007: 670). A number of prominent private
universities such as Tarumanagara University and
Trisakti University were subsequently founded in
the 1960s (Hill and Wie, 2012, 166). The
establishment of private higher education was
provisioned in the 1950 Basic Education Law, which
was eventually ratified into Law 12/1954. Similarly,
the permit to establish a private university was
provisioned in Law 15/1961. Nevertheless, the
government had not given much attention to private
universities until 1990 (ibid).
Generally speaking, the development of private
higher education can be perceived based on the
situation in 1970-1980 where higher education
enrolment was at its peak point. In thirty-five years’
time, the enrolment rate had reached 3.4 million,
which is an increase by nearly twenty folds (Buchori
Malik, 2004, 260). Private universities rapidly
developed due not only to increasing demand but
also the government’s inability to supply that
demand. Hill and Wie (2013, 161) distinguished
several element spropelling the growth of higher
education in Indonesia, and private higher education
did rapidly develop. The state’s education for all
principle had indeed impacted the demand for higher
education among students. Given that Indonesia is a
lower middle-income country, Professional
qualifications are a vital requisite in today’s labour
market, skilled workforce is required to obtain
professional jobs. Likewise, teachers and
professional civil servants are required to possess at
least a Bachelor’s degree, thereby increasing the
demand for higher education, and leading to a
substantial increase in the development of private
universities.
Moreover, the fact that Islamic educational
institutions had been established even prior to the
Dutch colonial period may be regarded as another
supporting factor that contributed to the proliferation
of private institutions. Islamic organisations, such as
Muhammadiyah, have played a substantial role in
developing private universities in numerous places
throughout Indonesia. The organisation established
the first Muhammadiyah University in Jakarta in
1955, and many other Muhammadiyyah Universities
were eventually founded in several cities both in and
out of Java. Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), another Islamic
organisation, is highly devoted to the Pesantren
tradition, or the traditional Islamic system (Welch,
2012).A number of pesantren managed by Nahdlatul
Ulama have institutionally or culturally contributed
to the establishment of Islamic higher education,
such as the University of Hasyim Asyáry which was
established in 1967.
Other than religious organisations or leaders,
businessmen or ethnic communities also establish
private universities, which are stand-alone
Neoliberalism and Inequality in Higher Education
1595
institutions. They are not limited to Islamic
organisations as Christian organisations have
established private universities as well such as Pelita
Harapan University, Res Publica University,
Profesor Mustopo University (Hill and Wie, 2013,
Welch, 2007). Students of Chinese descent usually
dominate these elite private universities (Hill &Wie,
2012).
A crucial point to consider is that private
education institutions in Indonesia are different from
private schools in developed countries. Public
universities are favoured since they are regarded as
having better quality and lower tuition fees.
Applicants wanting to study at public universities
must face immense competition because only one in
six candidates is accepted. In general, students who
gain entry to public universities are from high-
income families. One of the reasons is that students
from average income or poor families find it
difficult to compete with those who are better
prepared for the enrolment test by being able to
afford preparatory courses allowing them to become
familiar with the examination questions. Students
who fail the public university enrolment test will
most likely pursue their education at a private
university.
While there is exceedingly high demand for
private universities brought about by the
government’s inability to provide sufficient amount
of higher education facilities for all students, these
education institutions are confronted with the
enduring challenge of low academic quality and
weak financial capacity. Most of these private
institutions are unable to provide quality learning
process akin to that experienced at public
universities. Hill and Wie (2013: 161) observe that
some elite-private universities may be able to
provide proper learning and teaching quality, yet the
majority of them could not be expected to do so.
The fact that the majority of private education
institutions are predominantly established for lower-
income households (except for elite-private
institutions) should be taken into consideration. The
decision to attend a private school is primarily due to
failure of gaining entry into public university during
the academic selection period. This consequently
leads to an under-representation of students coming
from rural/remote areas and from economically
deprived families in the public system. The
education quality in rural areas is not on parwith its
urban counterparts. Bangay (2005: 170-171)
concluded that private schools provide their services
to disadvantaged students. The financial system
implemented in private higher education is not
unlike private schools in general, where their income
is obtained from tuition fees and donations as they
receive very limited public funding. They, as a
consequence, would depend on part-time academic
personnel who are paid by the hour and teach in
more than one institution (Welch, 2007).
7 CONCLUSION
Neo-liberalism principles such as commodification,
internationalization, and quality assurance have been
reproduced in several countries, including Indonesia,
and they have altered the orientation of education in
higher institution of learning. It has been responded
negatively, yet the process has persisted and is
sustained in various patterns. In the era of
capitalism, the university underwent a
transformation from university as a place of learning
into a corporation that is primarily concerned with
market share, serving the needs of commerce,
maximizing returns and economic investment, and
gaining competitive advantage. The transformation
occurs as a result of 'economic rationalism', which is
characterized by the reduction of government
funding for universities, the shift of university
orientation from fulfilling the needs of the elite to
fulfilling the massive educational needs for all
classes. Audit, performance indicators,
benchmarking, targeted management, periodic
teaching quality reviews are technologies that have
been used to disseminate university management
methods under the capitalist system. Those measures
have been considered to maintain inequality among
students and job dissatisfaction among academic
staff.
The academic system in Indonesia has
developed differently to that of the international
system. The policies and practices of academic life
in Indonesia are undoubtedly shaped by the
prevalent dual system of religious and secular
universities, public and private universities.
Indonesia’s colonial history has consequently led to
independent higher education system having very
limited relation to the international system. Aside
from public and private institutions, higher
education in Indonesia is specified based on whether
it is a religious or secular institution. Unlike private
institutions in developed countries, private higher
education institutions in Indonesia are allowed to
proliferate due to the government’s inability to
accommodate the high demand for higher education
enrolment. These private institutions in Indonesia
only have access to extremely limited public
funding.
Students with the highest achievement level
coming from the highest-economic households
commonly attend public secular universities. Some
private secular universities are considered on par
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with public secular universities in terms of quality,
their number, however, is very limited. Most of
private universities with low quality are the only
option for students coming from middle or lowest
economic households.
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