Jamaica Gleaner

SLB guarantors needed no more

Government moves to scrap requiremen­t for accessing tertiary education loans

- Edmond.campbell@gleanerjm.com

STUDENTS APPLYING for loans at the Students’ Loan Bureau (SLB) will no longer need a guarantor as the Government has removed the longstandi­ng requiremen­t.

Finance and the Public Service Minister Dr Nigel Clarke yesterday indicated that, effective April 1 this year, the SLB will no longer ask applicants to find guarantors to access loans to study at the tertiary level.

Clarke said the removal of the requiremen­ts for guarantors to be provided for applicants who are wards of the state in the 20232024 fiscal year led to an increase from 46 who applied during the previous financial year to 98 this fiscal year.

“Last year, i n the 202324 Budget, we removed the requiremen­ts for guarantors to be provided for applicants from PATH [Programme of Advancemen­t Through Health and Education] households. Since we lifted the requiremen­t for guarantors, within the last 12 months, the number of PATH beneficiar­ies accessing the SLB jumped from 192 in the previous year to 547 and the year is not yet finished. An increase of 185 per cent,” Clarke said.

Taking a swipe at Opposition Leader Mark Golding, who had said a People’s National Party Government would remove the requiremen­t for guarantors, Clarke quipped that while persons spoke about the policy change, the current administra­tion was implementi­ng it.

He said low income applicants would benefit from 4,200 grants in the sum of $60,000 each.

The finance minister also announced that the Government was moving to introduce unemployme­nt insurance to Jamaicans.

Clarke indicated that eligible employees would be registered and included in an unemployme­nt insurance scheme.

He said employees who contribute to the National Insurance Scheme would be automatica­lly included in unemployme­nt insurance with the requisite obligation­s and benefits.

“We are now at the point of implementa­tion and within the first quarter of the financial year we expect to sign a US$20-million loan agreement with the World Bank where they will provide the Ministry of Labour and Social Security with the technical support to, among many other things, implement unemployme­nt insurance in Jamaica,” Clarke said.

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