The Philippine Star

USAID to launch $30 M initiative to boost higher education in Phl

- By LOUELLA DESIDERIO

The US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID) is set to launch this year a $30-million initiative to help strengthen the country’s higher education system, according to the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority.

NEDA Undersecre­tary Rosemarie Edillon said the USAID is about to launch the US-Philippine­s Partnershi­p for Skills Innovation and Lifelong Learning (UPSKILL) program that will run for five years.

She said the USAID would be working with the Commission on Higher Education and state universiti­es for the initiative.

“We at NEDA are helping with the UPSKILL program because one of their focus is innovation,” Edillon said.

The NEDA serves as the secretaria­t of the National Innovation Council, a 25-member policy advisory body chaired by the President on innovation matters.

UPSKILL involves strengthen­ing the capacity of higher education institutio­ns in the country for innovation and entreprene­urship by training faculty and staff, improving curriculum­s and increasing technology transfers.

Under the initiative, there will be partnershi­ps to link academia and the private sector to enable higher education institutio­ns to provide education and skills training relevant to industry needs.

UPSKILL also supports improvemen­ts in higher education governance.

Edillon said a stronger higher education system is expected to lead to a bigger pool of innovators that would bring benefits to the economy.

“All products are a product of innovation. (With innovation,) we will have products originally from the Philippine­s, made in the Philippine­s. And this will bring more jobs, more investment­s and better quality of life,” she added.

Earlier, she said the NEDA is pushing for initiative­s to strengthen research and developmen­t efforts to promote innovation in the country.

Among the initiative­s being pushed is a scholarshi­p program to achieve the target of 500 researcher­s per million population by 2028.

According to Edillon, the NEDA also sees the need to set up a knowledge management system for research and developmen­t outputs in thecountry to make these accessible for market players.

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