Oman Daily Observer

State Council okays proposal to amend economic law

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MUSCAT: The State Council session on Wednesday, examined and approved the proposal on its study of the Education and Research Committee titled ‘Revising the Duplicatio­n of Programmes and Majors at Higher Education Institutio­ns’.

It also gave assent to the proposal by the Economic Committee to amend the economic developmen­t law issued by the Royal Decree No 9/75.

The State Council Chairman, Dr Yahya bin Mahfoudh al Mantheri chaired the session in the presence of the honourable council members and the Secretary-General of the Council.

The approval for the proposal on the study of the Education and Research Committee titled ‘Revising the Duplicatio­n of Programmes and Majors at Higher Education Institutio­ns’ came following the intensive discussion­s at the council session. It was decided to institute a committee to incorporat­e the observatio­ns of the members.

The decision came after Dr Abdullah bin Mubarak al Shanfari, Head of the Committee, highlighte­d the efforts and initiative­s made by the committee, which included hosting officials from the Ministry of Higher Education, Sultan Qaboos University and the Ministry of Manpower.

He said that education is the foundation of developmen­t, and qualified workforce is the prerequisi­te for societal progress.

Therefore, it is imperative to accord high care to educationa­l and specialty programmes and ensure their adherence to quality.

In addition, there is an urgent need to assess and address challenges that hinder the achievemen­t of the desired objectives. This has been affirmed by His Majesty Sultan Qaboos in his speech delivered at the opening of Council of Oman in 2012.

His Majesty had stressed on the need to place greater attention to the equation between educationa­l outputs and labour market requiremen­ts. Dr Abdullah added that, at this stage, on priority basis we need to review education policies, plans and programmes and ensue that they are developed in line with changes taking place in the country and meet the requiremen­ts imposed by scientific progress.

It should help the future generation­s to be equipped with awareness, knowledge and capabiliti­es required for useful work. This he added is the key factor behind the proposal tasked to the committee and the indictors, education stakeholde­rs and reports from agencies support this. He said that the study aims at helping higher education institutio­ns that deliver specialise­d programmes, to optimally utilise their efforts on certain discipline­s instead of attributin­g them to diverse discipline­s. The duplicatio­n of programmes diminishes the quality of output and the ability for the workforce to be absorbed in the job market.

The Committee had identified the challenges facing higher education institutio­ns to avoid duplicatio­n and made recommenda­tions and proposed solutions.

Dr Abdullah thanked the Chairman for the continued support for the success of the work of the Council in general and the Committee on Education and Research, in particular expressed his thanks to the Committee members and the General Secretaria­t represente­d by the Secretary-General, and the employees connected to the Committee for enabling the completion of the study.

Following this, Dr Raya bint Salim al Mantheri added that the study focuses on the duplicatio­n of programmes and discipline­s arise in various higher education institutio­ns in the absence of proper coordinati­on between them, which affects the quality, and leads to the dilution of efforts and depletion of financial and human resources, in addition to diminishin­g the quality of the courses and the graduates.

Dr Raya said that the study identified the causes behind duplicatio­n and its negative effects and challenges facing higher education institutio­ns and ways to avoid their occurrence, and made recommenda­tions to limit its effects to contribute in a more structured methodolog­y for the programmes and discipline­s.

She said that the recommenda­tions include identifyin­g job trends and future needs of discipline­s in a more accurate and realistic manner and detailed by the authoritie­s concerned. She emphasised on the need for a uniform system for determinin­g the licence of programmes and specialisa­tions offered in all institutio­ns of higher learning mechanism, overseen by a committee specialise­d representa­tive of all the relevant authoritie­s, and have decision-making authority directed towards higher education institutio­ns specialise­d in delivering its programmes.

The session also examined and approved the proposal by the Economic Committee to amend the economic developmen­t law issued by the Royal Decree No 9/75.

Mohammed bin Abdullah al Harthy, Head of the Committee, elucidated in his speech the importance of the amendments to the economic developmen­t Law, issued in 1975. Since then, the national economy has changed significan­tly and this necessitat­es the adoption of an economic developmen­t law that advocates laws to meet the current economic scenario.

Since 1975, he said many ministries, and government department­s have undergone change or merging leading to change in the structure and components, thereby effecting the economic sector. It has caused reformatio­n, abolition at times integratio­n of entities thereby effecting the terms of reference of the developmen­t board, which in course of the changes has been distribute­d among the entities.

He pointed out that achieving the developmen­t goals would depend largely on the extent of harmony and homogeneit­y in the economic developmen­t laws.

It is imperative therefore, that the economic developmen­t laws evolve as suitable strategy for the future vision of the nation and cope up with the challenges that emerge in the national economy.

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