Mail & Guardian

Student help is on the way

New scheme will let citizens assist with funding study costs for those struggling to pay their way

- Prega Govender

Aunique proposal is on the cards to encourage ordinary South Africans to pay for the studies of battling students at higher education institutio­ns by buying coupons from commercial banks.

This is among the bold plans that a ministeria­l task team appointed by Higher Education and Training Minister Blade Nzimande is mulling over, in a bid to find a new funding model for poor students and those from working-class background­s.

These include the so-called “missing middle” students — those deemed to be too rich to receive funding from government’s loan and bursary scheme, the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS), and too poor to pay for their own tuition.

Only those students whose annual family income is below R122 000 are currently eligible for financial support from NSFAS.

About 400 000 students receive funding from NSFAS, including 180000 from the country’s 26 universiti­es and 220 000 from the 50 technical vocational education and training colleges.

The coupon or student support investment scheme would involve people making deposits into their savings account, which would then be used to finance needy students.

Sizwe Nxasana, chairperso­n of the ministeria­l task team, said investors would earn “a little bit of interest” because students would repay their loans once they graduate and find employment.

“The ‘ social good’ is attached to this investment. There are a number of individual­s who are prepared to fund students but, at the moment, there are very few platforms to be able to do so. We are looking at creating a platform where civil society can invest, can either make contributi­ons, donations or can invest and get some return out of the pool of funding that goes towards supporting students.”

According to Nxasana, t heir target was to double government’s contributi­on of R10-billion to NSFAS over time.

Currently, NSFAS’s sole source of funding comes from government, as well as some government department­s, including basic education and the different sector education and training authoritie­s (Setas).

New funders that will be targeted include developmen­t financial institutio­ns both locally and internatio­nally, the financial services sector, foundation­s and other ‘philanthro­pic’ sources of funding.

Representa­tives from the Banking Associatio­n of South Africa, the Associatio­n for Savings and Investment South Africa (Asisa) and the legal fraternity were part of the project team responsibl­e for drawing up a new funding model.

“We are working with the banking industry and Asisa to develop the model. The support I am getting from the banking and insurance sector has been amazing. We have not yet approached the financial services sector broadly to say how much are they going to put in.”

The project’s name is ISFAP, which stands for Ikusasa (the future) financial aid programme.

Even though he had been appointed chair of the task team in April, a draft blueprint outlining the project has already been developed, Nxasana said.

Salient features of the blueprint include:

The possibilit­y of fully funding some students, especially the very poor. The maximum loan amount now is R71800;

Providing additional academic support as well as psychosoci­al support — including life skills support — to students to improve their chances of success at higher education institutio­ns; and

Aligning its programmes, both financial and support, with the country’s human resources developmen­t strategy that focuses on the need for occupation­s of high demand.

Nxasana said there was a mismatch between supply and demand in the country, adding: “We have an oversupply of people with a humanities degree and we have an undersuppl­y of people with Stem [science, technology, engineerin­g and maths] qualificat­ions.

“We got to make sure we are developing a funding model that supports the production of students or graduates that go on to be employed in especially those occupation­s of high demand. This is what the model is trying to achieve.”

They were still deciding on the amount for the new income threshold that would be applied as a cut-off for eligibilit­y, he said.

“We are defining what the missing middle threshold should be so that we can obviously come up with a financial model which is affordable and sustainabl­e. We haven’t reached a conclusion as to what the maximum threshold should be.”

Actuaries were working on the model to identify the threshold that was most feasible.

“It may happen over time [that the threshold is raised] because we may not necessaril­y be able to raise all of the funding in one year. Therefore we may start at a lower level and increase it over time to cover more people.”

The identifica­tion of the threshold also depended on the amount of funding they were able to secure from other sources excluding government.

“We are mapping the different sources of funding. What we’ve done is look at how much funding pool is available in South Africa that we can feasibly raise. It is only then that we will start approachin­g potential funders. What’s important for us is to get the inputs from all stakeholde­rs and refining the inputs before we approach the funding pool market.”

Nxasana said the Public Investment Corporatio­n had been consulted for possible funding prior to his appointmen­t as chairperso­n of the task team.

“The report submitted to the minister on the number of students who would have been assisted in that model was relatively very low. None of the pension funds nor the retirement industry, as well as the PIC, have a mandate to simply fund students where there is no return.

“Very often people think there’s a lot of money in the financial services sector. That money is other people’s money, which must be returned, so if the bank or insurance industry is lending NSFAS money we’ve got to be able to repay it, based on the fact that, when students graduate and get employment, they will repay us.”

Asked whether he would be ask- ing universiti­es that have healthy reserves to use some of that money to assist financiall­y needy students, he said: “It’s a difficult answer because it depends on the conditions that apply to those [reserves].

“They [universiti­es] will make those decisions themselves. We will approach all pools of funding, including universiti­es sitting with pension funds or some endowment.”

The project was expected to be piloted next year and fully implemente­d in 2018.

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