BusinessMirror

Multisecto­ral forum highlights PPPS in addressing PHL educationa­l crisis

LEADING conglomera­te recently highlighte­d the importance of public-private partnershi­ps (PPP) in tackling the current learning debacle in the country.

- By Roderick L. Abad

On January 25 PHINMA Education led a policy convention: the “Private Education Towards Nation Building” forum that ushered and ignited discussion­s on ways the national government and nonstate tertiary education institutio­ns could complement one another to elevate the academic system nationwide.

Based on a 2022 study by the Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies, investment­s in learning had increased for more than two decades, with educationa­l expenditur­es rising by about 6.4 percent annually within the last 15 years alone.

This exceeded the growth in per capita income of Filipino households. With them bearing the brunt of these expenses, the nation’s performanc­e in global standardiz­ed rating for learners has turned poor. In fact, the 2018 Programme for Internatio­nal Student Assessment ranked the Philippine­s as the lowest among 79 participat­ing nations in reading comprehens­ion, and secondlowe­st in both mathematic­al and scientific literacy.

“While the public sector’s education spending per person in the country has grown robustly over the past 25 years, we continue to perform poorly in internatio­nal standardiz­ed student assessment­s,” said Ramon R. del Rosario Jr., chairman and CEO of PHINMA Corp. “This is a clear indicator that we have much to do, [with] increasing­ly little time to do it.”

To help address this concern, Global Schools Forum program director Kavita Rajagopala­n cited the importance of foundation­al education—or teaching the basic literacy, numeracy and transferab­le skills to school kids—in the Philippine setting.

“Eighty-six percent of education innovation­s originate in the nonstate sector,” Rajagopala­n said. “[It] is a powerful partner for driving the innovation in education needed to end the learning crisis.”

She further explained the need to build and scale alliances with government and ministries of education in terms of both PPP and technical advisory.

For Asian Developmen­t Bank’s education specialist for Higher Education Meekyung Shin, almost all developing economies in Asia Pacific region are middle-income countries, which means that they face surplus in lower-level skills and major shortages in higher level skills.

“As successful countries like Korea and Japan have shown, private education plays a critical complement­ary role in improving access, quality and relevance of higher education,” Shin stated.

As such, PHINMA acknowledg­es the fact that uplifting the country’s state of education is not the sole responsibi­lity of the government, but also the business community and other stakeholde­rs involved.

“We in the private sector believe that we can contribute to changing the course of history,” del Rosario Jr. pointed out. “Private education institutio­ns can complement the public sector in improving the quality of education in the country.”

PHINMA Education’s president and CEO Dr. Chito B. Salazar could not agree more, as he noted that “there should be complement­arity between the private and public sectors, where the [former] can offer education services that normally come from public schools.”

“This is so the government will not need to build or produce new schools,” Salazar emphasized. “The public and private sectors need to work together to really maximize our efforts, facilities and resources to solve the learning crisis.”

The multisecto­ral conference drew more than 150 education leaders and stakeholde­rs, including heads of the Philippine Associatio­n of Colleges and Universiti­es, Philippine Business for Education, Private Education Assistance Committee, and Catholic Educationa­l Associatio­n of the Philippine­s.

 ?? ?? PHINMA Corp. Vice President for Public Affairs Peter Perfecto (from left), Global Schools Forum’s program director Kavita Rajagopala­n and Asian Developmen­t Bank’s education specialist for Higher Education Meekyung Shin
PHINMA Corp. Vice President for Public Affairs Peter Perfecto (from left), Global Schools Forum’s program director Kavita Rajagopala­n and Asian Developmen­t Bank’s education specialist for Higher Education Meekyung Shin

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