Fiji Sun

Declining Funds and Political Control ‘Killing’ PNG’s University System

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The vice-chancellor of Papua New Guinea’s University of Technology has warned that the country’s university system is gradually being killed by declining funding and political interferen­ce.

Albert Schram said the government cut funding for Unitech from 45 to 40 million kina (US$13.8 to US$12.3 million) this financial year, and he expected the trend to continue.

And since a new Higher Education Act was passed in 2014 the government

The funding cuts meant the institutio­n could not grow as it needed to in order to get more students, improve the quality of education and produce competent graduates.

has sought to gain control over the appointmen­t of university management staff.

This was particular­ly vexing for Unitech since it had only recently emerged from a long governance crisis marked by political interferen­ce.

Dr Schram was hoping for change on these fronts in the new term of parliament, in order for the university system to survive.

“It’s dying a slow death by a thousand cuts because of the annual funding cuts. But if you, in addition, politicise the governance of it, then you can be sure that in 10 or 15 years there’s not a credible university system left in Papua New Guinea.”

According to the vice-chancellor, Unitech had done its best to get back on its feet after significan­t destructio­n and unrest stemming from student protests against the prime minister last year.

But Dr Schram explained there was a limit to what the institutio­n could achieve with declining funds. The funding cuts meant the institutio­n could not grow as it needed to in order to get more students, improve the quality of education and produce competent graduates. “With good leadership and adequate investment you can grow a university system very quickly,” Dr Schram explained.

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