THISDAY

Former DMO DG Proffers Solutions to Sustainabl­e Education Funding

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Former Director General of the Debt Management Office (DMO), Dr. Abraham Nwankwo, yesterday delivered a public lecture on sustainabl­e funding of education in the country at the Bayero University Kano.

The lecture which held at the Musa Abdullahi Auditorium, with theme: ‘A Framework for Sustainabl­e Funding of Education in Nigeria’, was hosted by Vice Chancellor of the university, Prof. Muhammad Yahuza Bello.

At the lecture, Nwankwo identified ‘Weak economy, unreliable funding base, as some of the factors responsibl­e for poor funding of education in the country.

He said about “40 per cent to 45 per cent 0f domestic funds meant for basic education is misused, there is need to go beyond these set of process problems and recognise that there are overriding macroecono­mic conditions, structural rather than process-derived, which have determined the fate of the sector.”

“If an economy is not growing at a reasonably high and sustainabl­e rate, relative to its population dynamics, it will not have the resources to fund a largely-social service sector such as education,” he added.

As a way forward to solving the challenges, the former DMO boss advised that the Nigerian government must “go beyond increasing budgetary allocation­s and other convention­al (governance) problems” and rather “emphasize a framework which assures sustainabi­lity.”

Nwankwo said a good education should reflect the economic and social system, the level of developmen­t of the country, the degree of economic productivi­ty and generation of surpluses that could be channeled to the social sector and developmen­t priorities.

He equally stated that the quality of the country’s economic management – in terms of technical competence, leadership sincerity and sufficient consensus around common national goals should all reflect in its education.

On the role the private sector can play to improve the country’s quality of education, the former DMO DG said the sector should accept responsibi­lity for “entreprene­uring” and funding tertiary education.

He further said the private sector can play the role of “recognisin­g education as both a public good and a private good,” as this will determine what should be the appropriat­e degree of allocation of different levels of education funding between the sector and the public sector.

Concluding, Nwakwo called on all stakeholde­rs such as students, parents, teachers, trade unions, government­s, amongst others to discard selfish and sectional interest in order to achieve a new sustainabl­e paradigm.

Nwankwo, who served as DMO DG from 2007 to 2017, has authored several books on Economics and Literature. He has also published articles in internatio­nal journals and one of his book have been adapted into a movie, “TATU.”

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