A gaggle of outstanding economists and socio-political thinkers vehemently opposed proposals to mandate state universities and faculties (SUCs) to supply tuition-free education, arguing that whereas “wellintended,” such a coverage can be “anti-poor.”

In a press assertion issued on Tuesday, advocacy group Foundation for Economic Freedom (FEF) as a substitute pushed for the implementation of an present regulation that unifies and rationalizes all modalities for scholar monetary help, together with scholarships, grants-in-aid and scholar loans.

FEF stated the proposal to extend funding without cost tuition to SUCs would profit higher-income college students and supply unfair competitors to non-public establishments that are extra environment friendly in offering greater education.

Providing P8.three billion to SUCs without cost tuition is “anti-poor” as a result of this considers solely tuition in the price of greater education, FEF stated.

“Tuition covers only one-third of the cost of attending college. The balance consists of cost of living allowances, which the poor are in no position to pay. Higher income students who have the ability to pay for these living allowances will end up using the free tuition subsidy,” FEF stated.

FEF additionally argued that enrollment in SUCs was already extremely favorable to greater earnings college students.

The group quoted a analysis by FEF fellows Aniceo Orbeta and Vicente Paqueo who cited – based mostly on the 1999 and 2014 Annual Poverty Indicators Survey – that the majority of scholars in public greater academic establishments had been largely from greater earnings teams whereas college students coming from the underside 20 % consisted of solely 11 % in 1999 and 12 % in 2014.

“Students from poor families are only a small proportion of SUCs’ student population because they can hardly pay for the full cost of attending college which not only consists of tuition, but board and lodging expenses as well. They are also less prepared academically to pass the entrance exams and pass the academic requirements of four-year college courses,” FEF argued.

“Increasing the budget for free tuition will intensify the exodus of higher income students from private educational institutions toward SUCs and further worsen the proportion of poor students attending SUCs. Higher income students who are more academically prepared will capture the benefits of free college education.”

FEF additionally feared that the allocation of P8.three billion without cost school tuition would harm personal greater education establishments by creating unfair competitors. It added that non-public greater academic establishments weren’t in an analogous place of with the ability to supply free tuition from taxpayer pesos.

As another, the group as a substitute proposed that the federal government channel funds to implement the Unified Student Assistance System for Tertiary Education (UniFAST), enacted into regulation via Republic Act No. 10687.

Signed into regulation by then Pres. Benigno Aquino in 2015, this piece of laws supplies a complete and unified monetary help system to tertiary college students within the Philippines. This was meant to present certified and deprived college students entry to scholarships and different types of monetary help with out the patronage of politicians.

“It also doesn’t favor SUCs over private higher educational institutions as the assistance is given to the student and not the school,” FEF stated of the UniFAST regulation.

“Targeting the poor with full financing using grants-in-aid under the Uni FAST law will clearly benefit more poor students than an untargeted general tuition subsidy for students of SUCs,” the FEF stated, quoting fellows Orbeta and Paqueo.

FEF, an advocacy group for good financial governance and market-friendly reforms, is chaired by former Finance Secretary Roberto de Ocampo. Its vice chair is Romy Bernardo whereas the president is Calixto Chikiamco. Its senior advisers are former Prime Minister/Finance Minister Cesar Virata and UP Economics Professor Emeritus and former Economic Planning Minister Gerardo Sicat. Board members embody Anthony Abad, Art Corpuz, Eduardo Gana, Felipe Medalla, Vaugh Montes, Simon Paterno, Perry Pe and Gloria Tan-Climaco.//

Main Menu

Secondary Menu