Aussie spills the $50K mistake she’ll never make again
- Aussie regrets studying at university
- She has to pay off more than $50,000 HECS debt
- READ MORE: Proof young Aussies have never had it worse
A young business graduate has claimed her degree was 'not worth it' after discovering her HECS debt has ballooned to more than $50,000.
Perth woman Pascal Zoghbi, 22, told Yahoo she regretted studying a Bachelor of Business and majoring in marketing at the University of Western Australia .
She said her debt was around $48,000 when she graduated in 2023 and believed the figure was slowly growing smaller due to compulsory repayments from her salary.
'Because I knew I was paying it off, I genuinely thought it would be at least under $50,000,' she said.
'The fact that I saw it back to $50,000, if not more - that was shocking.
'I was like, "Are you serious?" Literally everything that I have paid is just now back again.'
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese made a pre-election promise to cut 20 per cent off all student loan debts, which would wipe around $16billion for three million Aussies.
While not legislated yet, Albanese has said it would be the first piece of legislation introduced into the new parliament when it returns on July 22.

Under the plan, a graduate with an average student debt of $27,600 would see their loan reduced by $5,520.
The reduction would be backdated to June 1, before the 3.2 per cent indexation was applied this year.
In 2024, debts were indexed at four per cent.
The reforms would also raise the threshold for repayment from $54,453 to $67,000 for the 2025-26 financial year, and lower the rate to be repaid.
For someone on a middle income of $70,000, this would mean they pay around $1,300 less a year in repayments.
But for Ms Zoghbi, that would still leave her with $40,000 left to repay.
'I'm still $40,000 in debt for a degree that is not worth being $40,000 in debt for. It used to be free, which baffles me,' she said.
'As a marketing degree, you cannot get enough money coming in in any job that's going to be able to financially set you up to pay your HECS debt.'

Ms Zoghbi said she was worried her HECS debt could impact her ability to secure a home loan in the future.
'It's not worth the debt at all,' she said.
'I do not implement anything that I've learned at uni in my marketing job right now.'
Ms Zoghbi said she knew many people working in marketing who don't have degrees and managed to get a foot in the door with experience.
'It's all about experience at the end of the day, it's not about your degree at all,' she said.
During a visit to the University of New South Wales last week, federal education minister Jason Clare said new data showed the number of Aussie students starting a university degree was 'bouncing back big time'.
'The number of Australian students starting an undergraduate or a postgraduate degree this year looks set to be the highest on record,' he said.
'And that's a good thing. We want more Aussies to get more skills and to be able to get the careers of their dreams.'
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