Australia's vocational education and training (VET) system will be overhauled to become easier to navigate and more efficient, the federal government has announced.
Significant duplication of courses in the higher education sector has resulted in students having to study the same thing multiple times, Skills and Training Minister Brendan O'Connor said.
There are currently 5000 units which have more than 70 per cent overlap with at least one other unit.
"Due to transferable skills being poorly recognised, students may need to undertake duplicate additional training that delivers similar skills to those they already have in order to move into a new job," he said in a statement.
"Any reform in this important area will have regard to industry standards and their specific needs."
Working with states, territories and unions the government will make the qualifications system easier to understand through reforms which will give Australians transferable and relevant skills.
Students, employers and training organisations will benefit from the changes to simplify the system, the minister said.
"We need to reform the VET sector, we need to put TAFE back at the centre (and) we need to deliver courses, apprenticeships and traineeships that are actually filling skill shortages," Mr O'Connor told ABC Insiders on Sunday.
The announcement comes after Prime Minister Anthony Albanese pledged to fast track 180,000 fee-free TAFE places by 2023.
Mr Albanese told attendees at the jobs and skills summit last week the $1.1 billion package would be jointly funded by federal, state and territory governments.
While the initial funding is for the next financial year, Mr O'Connor said federal, state and territory governments were negotiating a five year long agreement.
The Commonwealth could potentially provide $3.7 billion over the five year period, starting January 1 2024, Mr O'Connor said.
"That's certainly the amount that we're hoping to be able to provide ... but it's predicated on an agreement with the states and territories," he said,
The agreement must ensure reforms to the VET systems to make it fit for purpose for students, current workers and the labour market, Mr O'Connor said.
The announcements out of last week's summit will make a significant difference to the regional Australian workforce, Agriculture Minister Murray Watt said.
"The reality is that agriculture is not the only industry with a massive worker shortage," he told Sky News on Sunday.
"There's a range of measures that we've committed to that will start right now that will have immediate benefit for agriculture as we then work on some of the more long-term issues through that working group."
In addition to workers already in Australia, current estimates show about 40,000 Pacific Island workers who are vetted and ready to migrate for work, Mr Watt said.
"We also want to make sure that we're encouraging locals to take up careers in agriculture and providing them with the skills that are needed to do so," he said.
Following the summit the government also announced Australians on the aged and veterans pensions will be able to earn up to $4000 in extra income a year without losing their benefits.
But opposition spokeswoman Michaelia Cash said the announcement was a "half-baked attempt" at a proposal previously made under the former Liberal-National government by the now Opposition Leader Peter Dutton.
"What do we get from Mr Albanese after the summit? A very strange half-baked attempt to go halfway towards realising what Mr Dutton had put on the table," she told Sky News.
"(It's) a dismal failure and a great disappointment to businesses."