Mail & Guardian

Universiti­es dig in heels over 0% hike

Only an 8% rise in income will be enough to doctor their ailing financial health, varsities say

- Prega Govender

The powers that be at the country’s universiti­es have pushed back on a proposed fee hike of 6.3% in a move that saw university councils reclaim authority over the running of their own finances.

A body representi­ng the councils of the country’s 26 universiti­es is adamant that Higher Education Minister Blade Nzimande’s comment this week — that the decision to increase fees rested with councils and not the ministry — was as a result of their interactio­n with him.

In a behind-the-scenes meeting last Thursday night, which was attended by vice-chancellor­s and some members of the University Council Chairs Forum (UCCF), council representa­tives insisted that they would have the final say over any decision reached between the government and universiti­es on fee increases.

Nzimande met them the following day.

Roy Marcus, the UCCF’s deputy chairperso­n, said he told members at Thursday’s meeting that, if the government decided on a 0% fee increase for next year, it could not unilateral­ly impose it on all universiti­es.

“Universiti­es will have to go back to their councils and the councils will have to make a value judgment as to whether they can issue a mandate on the basis of that particular decision by government,” he said.

“We said we can longer be put into a position where we are held accountabl­e, on the one hand, for the financial integrity of the university and, on the other hand, our power to make decisions on fees is taken away.”

Said Marcus: “The most disastrous thing that happened in October 2015 was that the decision [to hold councils accountabl­e for universiti­es’ finances] was taken away when there was an agreement that there would be a 0% fee increase for 2016.”

The ANC’s national executive committee resolved after last weekend’s meeting that the principle of no- fee increases in universiti­es should remain in place.

Vice-chancellor­s at last Thursday’s meeting also decided not to align themselves with either Nzimande or students.

One vice-chancellor told the & Guardian that colleagues at other universiti­es had stated quite strongly that their commitment was primarily to their university.

“They don’t feel the need to be politicall­y aligned, either with the minister against the students or with the students against the minister. Our primary mandate is to ensure the quality of our academic programmes and the financial sustainabi­lity of the university.”

Meanwhile, Ahmed Bawa, chief executive of Universiti­es South Africa (USAf), an associatio­n representi­ng the country’s 26 universiti­es, said there was “a very strong reaction” from vice-chancellor­s to the recommenda­tion by the Council on Higher Education (CHE), a body that advises Nzimande, that fees increase by 6.3% next year.

USAf said an increase of less than 8% in annual income “is likely to compromise the financial health” of at least 17 universiti­es as early as next year. “We just felt that it was the wrong recommenda­tion and we made that quite clear to the minister.”

Bawa said the 8% increase suggested by the vice-chancellor­s was not a “thumb-suck” figure but was arrived at after calculatio­ns involving higher education price index.

He said he was in discussion­s

 ?? Photo: Nardus Engelbrech­t/ Gallo Images ?? Clear message: Students protest outside Parliament last year against a proposed hike in tuition fees. In an open letter to government, more than 1200 academics said universiti­es had reached a limit and could not ‘weather any further cuts without...
Photo: Nardus Engelbrech­t/ Gallo Images Clear message: Students protest outside Parliament last year against a proposed hike in tuition fees. In an open letter to government, more than 1200 academics said universiti­es had reached a limit and could not ‘weather any further cuts without...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa