Fees for all government-sponsored students in public and private universities is expected to rise after a parliamentary committee on education agreed with institutions’ management to gradually increase it.
The National Assembly Committee on Education said the current fees of Sh16,000 has not been adjusted since 1989 despite the rise in cost of running tertiary institutions.
Yesterday, during a meeting between the Treasury, vice-chancellors and the National Assembly, key education stakeholders said there is need to increase the fees from Sh16,000 to Sh48,000 per year “without burdening parents.”
Florence Mutua, the National Assembly Education Committee chair said the Higher Education Loans Board (Helb) will consequently increase allocation per student.
Hard times
“We agreed that everything is done at Helb level because the hard economic times, for now, may not allow for any fees increment,” Ms Mutua said.
She said extremely needy children will be given grants.
Parents, however, said the move to push for higher loans is just another way of increasing fees since the loans will still be repaid by students.
“If you increase Helb loan, it basically means that you have increased fees because it shall be paid by the learners eventually,” said a parent.
The recurrent funding to universities is based on Differentiated Unit Cost (DUC) model where the government caters for 80 per cent of the unit cost while students pay 20 per cent through HELB loans and household support in tuition fees.
Education Principal Secretary Simon Nabukwesi said the time of establishment of the figures in 1989, it was estimated that the average cost for a student to study at the university was Sh120,000, of which Sh86,000 was for tuition while Sh34,000 for student upkeep.
“Of the Sh84,000, the government would cover Sh70,000 while the students would be responsible for Sh16,000,” said the PS.
The PS said there is need to establish a seed fund of Sh2.5 billion to support first year students initially to acquire laptops, noting other learners will be progressively supported as students adjust to online and blended learning.
Kenya Universities and Colleges Central Placement Services (KUCCPS) has placed 452,601 students in universities from 2014 to 2020, of which 366,331 (81 per cent) have been placed in public universities while 86,270 (19 per cent) have placed in private universities.
The PS said the number of Kenya Certificate Secondary Education (KCSE) candidates qualifying for university admission is expected to increase yet the government funding to public universities is constrained.
“As a result, private universities are expected to play an important role in meeting the rising demand. Private universities that offer specialised programmes at competitive cost will continue attracting students,” said Nabukwesi said.
He said disparity in funding of programmes under DUC for government-sponsored students in private universities compared to public universities, which is 18 per cent and 53 per cent per student respectively, is a big challenge.
The committee said low funding to universities has led to accumulation of pending bills of Sh36.7 billion, which comprise statutory deductions, capital development expenditure, CBA increase of wages and salaries.
The PS said there has been a consistent growth in disbursed Helb loans from Sh37.2 billion in financial year 2013/2014 to Sh94.75 billion in 2020/2021.
Nabukwesi said the annual requirement per student is estimated at Sh200,000 but Helb currently provides Sh68,000, leaving a huge deficit.
“There is need to increase individual loans to a maximum of Sh80,000 and a minimum of Sh68,000 to meet the growing variance,” said the PS.
The committee suggested an increase in DUC to 80 per cent (Sh73.91) billion from the current 53 per cent (Sh41.907 billion) for public universities and 18 per cent (Sh2.4 billion) for private institutions.
“This is based on university enrollment of 500,000 students at an average DUC rate of 192,000 for human and science students,” said the PS.
Nabukwesi said in some universities, the total number of students placed is lower than the declared capacity.
He said the current budget allocation to universities for financial year 2020/2021 is far much lower at Sh43,907,000, from the required Sh80,018,000.
“Most of the universities are currently insolvent as they cannot meet statutory obligations,” said the PS.
He said the downside is that monthly payroll requirement is Sh4.5 billion, hence 12 months requirement is Sh54 billion.
Private universities also received only Sh2.4 billion from the projected Sh6.6 billion budget and hence will be unable to offer quality university education to students, including government-sponsored students.
CBA factor
National Treasury PS Julius Muia said the government is constrained financially and asked vice-chancellors to come up with ways to raise funds to run their institutions.
He said the reduced enrollment of students to universities has been attributed to a shift of focus in quality education to Technical Industrial Vocational and Entrepreneurship Training (TIVET).
“Decline enrolment affected internally generated revenues from self-sponsored students thus affecting flow of income,” said Muia.
The PS Treasury said public universities have been left grappling with huge workforce (non-teaching staff), unsustainable payrolls, increasing debt (PAYE), pensions pending bills of statutory deductions and very little funds for operations, maintenance and infrastructure development.
He said the university funding has not expanded due to the CBAs awards.
Muia said the Ministry of Education should consider reviewing tuition fees and also consider increasing loans to students.
The PS Treasury urged universities to close satellite campuses that are not economically viable. “For instance Jaramogi Odinga, Maseno and Masinde Muliro should not be opening campuses in Nairobi and Mombasa but rather in Western Region to avoid over-concentration of university satellite campus in towns,” he said.
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