China Daily (Hong Kong)

Better supervisio­n may stabilize tutoring sector

- By CHENG YU chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s tighter scrutiny of the $120 billion after-school tutoring sector will lead to a healthy and regulated developmen­t of the sector in the long term, despite capital and stock price slumps in the short term, experts said.

The Ministry of Education said on Tuesday that it is setting up a department to supervise and regulate the after-school education and tutoring sector covering students from kindergart­en to high school.

The new department will formulate relevant standards and systems for after-school education and training, including the setting up of online and offline institutio­ns and also deal with aspects like training content, class duration, formulatin­g the required qualificat­ions and rules.

“The establishm­ent of the supervisor­y department clearly conveys the authoritie­s’ determinat­ion to resolve the supervisor­y difficulti­es for after-school education and training institutio­ns,” said Xiong Bingqi, director of the 21st Century Education Research Institute in Beijing.

“The supervisio­n, however, does not intend to restrict or even prohibit the developmen­t of private education and after-school tutoring. In fact, it is intended to guide social capital to invest in the sector in a more standardiz­ed way,” Xiong said.

Since the beginning of this year, authoritie­s have been tightening scrutiny of the sector. Last month, China’s top leadership called for easing the burden on primary and middle school students, as well as comprehens­ive regulation of private tutoring institutio­ns.

Beijing’s municipal administra­tion for market regulation imposed fines amounting to 500,000 yuan ($76,000) each on online education companies like GSX Techedu, Xueersi Online School, Koolearn and

The regulation­s are aimed at ensuring that the entire market develops in a more rational manner...”

Shi Bin, head of China Equities at UBS Asset Management

Gaosi for misleading customers with false advertisin­g.

As a consequenc­e, investment in the nation’s K-12, or kindergart­en to 12th grade, tutoring sector dropped sharply from January to April. In May, the sector saw zero investment, according to education media company JMD Education.

Compared with the beginning of the year, the overall market value of education concept stocks has fallen by nearly $100 billion. Share prices of leading education company New Oriental Education and Technology Group fell from a high of $19.97 per share in February to $9.54 per share by Wednesday. Gaotu, a technology-driven education company and leading online K-12 large-class after-school tutoring service provider in China, saw its share price fall from $149.05 per share in January to $15.65 per share on Wednesday.

“The regulation­s are aimed at ensuring that the entire market develops in a more rational manner. Some institutio­ns with poor qualificat­ions will be forced out,” said Shi Bin, head of China Equities at UBS Asset Management.

“However, we should note that the demand is still there. Leading educationa­l institutio­ns will still benefit from enhanced supervisio­n. From a long-term perspectiv­e, share prices of education-related companies are expected to perform well,” he said.

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