Manila Standard

Private schools slam ‘no permit, no exam’ ban

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THE Coordinati­ng Council of Private Educationa­l Associatio­ns (COCOPEA)—a group of private schools, colleges, universiti­es, and technical and vocational education and training institutio­ns—warned that many private colleges and universiti­es will run out of operating cash in less than two months if the “No Permit, No Exam” policy is prohibited.

COCOPEA chairperso­n Bernard Villamor explained that a recent study conducted by the Philippine Associatio­n of Colleges and Universiti­es (PACU) and participat­ed in by 27 private colleges and universiti­es showed that as of now, tuition and other fees collection­s can only cover 7.7-months of operation expenses on average.

However, if the “No Permit, No Exam” policy is prohibited, the study showed that the financial capacity of these schools would significan­tly weaken, and tuition and other fees would now be able to cover only two months’ worth of operating expenses on average.

“After which, colleges and universiti­es would run out of operating cash and would need to find external or other sources of financing (such as loans or savings) to cover their costs. This is a significan­t drop from the 7.7-month average colleges and universiti­es have under the status quo,” Villamor said. “In the absence or lack of effective means to collect, or any compulsion to ensure prompt payment, we fear that the viability of private educationa­l institutio­ns will be endangered, which in turn will disrupt access to education. It is clear that for private schools, colleges and universiti­es, any payment received go towards paying all capital expenditur­es or costs associated with school operations. Thus, making prompt payment or collection critical. In turn, moral compulsion is necessary to ensure that there is prompt payment,” he added.

Villamor also cited an April 2023 study by the Catholic Educationa­l Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (CEAP), where about 49% of the 224 basic education school respondent­s reported that they are currently already at a loss financiall­y or are only breaking even in terms of monthly expenses compared to monthly collection­s. The rest reported that they only have a small surplus, at best.

Similarly, the study showed that 64.2% of the 53 college and university respondent­s also reported that they are currently already at a loss or at a breakeven point.

“These schools will be most financiall­y at risk with the ‘No Permit, No Exam’ bill. Breaking even in the school set-up means that any income generated from tuition is just enough to cover the operating costs and expenses, such as salaries of teachers and school employees, energy, water and other utilities, and other operating expenses. CEAP and non-CEAP schools, colleges and universiti­es covering an enrollment of 532,000 students participat­ed in the study,” Villamor explained.

“In as much as taxes are the lifeblood of the government, tuition and other school fees are the lifeblood of private educationa­l institutio­ns. As such, its prompt payment and certain availabili­ty is an imperious need for private educationa­l institutio­ns who heavily rely on a steady operating cash flow for its continued dayto-day operations,” he added.

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