Daily Dispatch

Grow economy first

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BUSINESS Unity SA (Busa) says free higher education is not sustainabl­e and business cannot carry its costs alone, given the low levels of economic growth.

Free higher education has been central to the debate on transformi­ng the private sector, with many contributo­rs pointing out that the private sector remains one of the key beneficiar­ies of university graduates.

Busa on Thursday made a submission to the fees commission, in which it said the economy had to grow in order to provide support to the call for free

The economy had recorded 0.3% growth in 2016, below the Treasury and the South African Reserve Bank’s estimates.

“We need a broad social consensus that addresses the challenges in basic and higher education systemical­ly, supports institutio­nal structures and makes the space for the private sector to draw the skills that are needed to power the economy,” Busa said in its submission.

Statistics fourth quarter Labour higher education. SA’s Quarterly Force Survey 2016 showed that there was a direct correlatio­n between levels of education achieved and labour market absorption.

At 37.1%, youth unemployme­nt is 10.6 percentage points higher than the national average – a situation analysts have characteri­sed as untenable and a “ticking time bomb”.

Unemployme­nt among graduates is 7%, but 59% among youth who do not have matric.

Increasing taxes has been put on the table as a mechanism to fund free higher education.

Busa supports the government reprioriti­sing funds for education, but says business cannot afford an additional financial burden without this having a negative effect on the sustainabi­lity of enterprise operations and employment.

Busa called for an overhaul of the National Student Financial Aid Scheme and a realignmen­t of Sector Education and Training Authority training and systems.

Business, according to Busa, had also contribute­d R17 billion towards skills developmen­t through the skills developmen­t levy. — TMG

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