Summarize this content to 2000 words in 6 paragraphs That trend was the opposite of NSW, Queensland and South Australia, where lower-priced schools were leading the market upward.LoadingEdstart said the steep rise in fees in NSW was driven by recent improved pay deals for that state’s independent school teachers, resulting in schools passing their higher wage bills onto fee-paying parents.A big recent pay win for Victorian TAFE teachers is expected to put upward pressure on wages in the Victorian education sector, while the Independent Education Union told The Age this week that it would push hard for a significant pay rise in the sector when bargaining begins this year.Non-Catholic private schools in Victoria bargain with their staff individually and several recent deals suggest that wages are moving upward in that sector too.But Edstart chief executive Jack Stevens told The Age that there was hope that Victorian parents would not be suddenly asked to pay more to fund rising teacher wages.“I’m not convinced that you’re going to see a massive increases flow through the Victorian system,” he said.“There’s not a lot of room for that to be absorbed by the system on top of the payroll tax, because that’s already just jammed a big challenge into the budgets of every schools that are getting hit with it.”Rachel Holthouse, chief executive of lobby group Independent Schools Victoria, said schools were “acutely conscious of the pressures on family budgets” when setting fees.Loading“Schools are not immune to the rising costs affecting the entire community,” Holthouse said.“They face increasing costs in areas like utilities, insurance and especially staff salaries, which make up the largest component of their operating expenses.“The Edstart report confirms the harmful impact on families of payroll tax imposed on a growing number of independent schools by the Victorian government.”Education Minister Ben Carroll defended the payroll tax settings, saying the system was fair.“Every government school in Victoria pays payroll tax so it’s only fair that the highest-fee private schools now also contribute,” a spokesperson said.“We listened closely to schools on this policy – keeping over 90 per cent of Victoria’s non-government schools exempt and increasing the threshold to make sure only the high-fee schools are subject to payroll tax.”Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.
Keep Reading
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.
© 2025 Globe Timeline. All Rights Reserved.