Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

A bridge to universal education

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In a confrontat­ional world where protection­ism is on the rise, multilater­alism has become an easy target for criticism. But those who doubt its value must have short memories. They seem to have forgotten that the Marshall Plan rebuilt Europe after World War II, NATO kept nuclear war at bay during the Cold War, and foreign aid lifted millions of people out of poverty in just the past few decades.

At the World Bank and the IMF’s annual spring meetings in Washington, DC, delegates reinforced the case for internatio­nal cooperatio­n. In particular, discussion focused on the Internatio­nal Finance Facility for Education (IFFEd), a bold plan to ensure that, for the first time in history, all of the world’s 1.6 billion boys and girls – including refugees and displaced children in low- and middle-income countries – are in school and learning.

The IFFEd draws its inspiratio­n from two landmark examples of internatio­nal cooperatio­n: the joint IMF-World Bank Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative, which wiped out $100 billion in unpayable debt; and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculos­is, and Malaria, which has saved millions of lives by providing immunisati­ons and other services.

The IFFEd, for its part, would facilitate annual investment­s in education to the tune of nearly $10 billion. With these resources, we can make significan­t progress toward the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal for education, which aims to make primary and secondary education available for all children by 2030.

The quest for universal education is the civil-rights struggle of our age. After years of internatio­nal neglect, 260 million children are not in school, and 400 million children are functional­ly illiterate. If current trends persist, by 2030, more than 800 million young people – half of the world’s youths – will leave school without the basic skills necessary for the modern labour market. And, by 2050, higher education will be available for 80% of young people in Korea, Japan and Taiwan, but for no more than 10% of young people in Sub-Saharan African countries.

The need for expanded investment in education more urgent for girls and young women. Putting is even girls in donor countries, but also to the 47 lower-middle-income countries that are home to nearly half of the world’s schoolchil­dren. Developing countries and donors will enter into a compact in which each has a specific role to play to ensure that education is made available for all children.

Under this arrangemen­t, each developing country will commit to achieving education outcomes commensura­te with those of the current top 25% of countries, and to increasing the proportion of national income invested in education to 5.8%, from the current average of 4%. In return, donor countries will increase the share of funds for education in their foreign-aid budgets from the current average of 10% to 15%. They will also backstop developmen­t loans from the World Bank and regional developmen­t banks.

Even in 2030, the world’s poorest countries will not be able to afford around half of their total education costs. So, rather than having to borrow at interest rates of 3.5-4% to pay for teachers’ salaries, lower-middle-income countries will benefit from a new system of guarantees and low-interest or interest-free credits. And, by providing for lower-middleinco­me countries, we will be able to provide more direct grants for the 200 million children living in low-income countries.

Using as collateral the $150 billion of reflows from loans made in the 1970s and 1980s, we can increase the World Bank’s capacity to provide grants through its Internatio­nal Developmen­t Associatio­n. If we also divert a larger share of IDA contributi­ons toward education, we can increase the education-aid funds available annually to the poorest countries from $1.6 billion (as of 2016) to more than $4 billion by 2020.

This up-front investment in education would extend the opportunit­y for a better life to more people than ever before. It would boost employment, slow population growth, and reduce infant and maternal mortality. And, as shown in the Learning Generation report, by 2050, GDP per capita in lowincome countries would be 70% higher. Most important, it would provide hope to the millions of children who need it the most.

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