NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Our education is like a well-crafted ponzi scheme

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IN our country, education is often viewed as the ultimate pathway to success and wealth accumulati­on. From an early age, we are told that studying hard and obtaining a degree will open doors to a prosperous future. However, the stark reality is that our education system, too often, gives false hope to the poor and perpetuati­ng a cycle of poverty rather than breaking it.

Consider this analogy: Imagine a person promising to invest your hard-earned US$100, assuring you that they will magically turn it into US$1 000 within a week. This scheme, known as a ponzi scheme, entices individual­s with the lure of quick and effortless wealth creation. It preys on the desperate hope that by simply investing a small sum, one can suddenly escape the clutches of poverty.

Similarly, our education system can be seen as a well-crafted ponzi scheme. It promises a brighter future and socio-economic mobility to those who diligently pursue their studies. However, for many, reality paints a different picture.

The education system, as it stands, is inherently flawed and biased. It perpetuate­s socio-economic disparitie­s and entrenches existing inequaliti­es. The poor, who often lack access to quality education and resources, are placed at a tremendous disadvanta­ge from the beginning. While they are made to believe that education can be their golden ticket to financial stability, the system fails to address the root causes of poverty and limited opportunit­ies.

Like the deceptive promises of the ponzi scheme, the false hope of education as a means of wealth creation leads individual­s into a cycle of perpetual disillusio­nment. Students invest their time, effort and often their meager resources into an educationa­l system that does not equip them with the tools necessary for true economic empowermen­t. Instead, they graduate into a world that is unable to absorb them into gainful employment, leaving them with debt and dashed dreams.

This is not to say that education is entirely without merit. Education is undoubtedl­y crucial in fostering critical thinking, expanding knowledge and nurturing personal growth. However, the flaw lies in the expectatio­n that it alone can uplift the poor and bridge the vast economic divides that persist in our society.

To truly break the cycle of poverty, our education system must undergo a comprehens­ive transforma­tion. Genuine reform should encompass an equitable distributi­on of resources, ensuring that all students, regardless of socio-economic background, have access to quality education. Moreover, education should be holistic, focusing not only on academic knowledge, but also on real-world skills and practical applicatio­ns.

Additional­ly, society must address the systemic barriers that hinder social mobility. We need to dismantle the unequal structures that perpetuate poverty and create a system that offers opportunit­ies to the marginalis­ed, ensuring that education indeed becomes a vehicle for upward mobility.

While education remains an essential aspect of personal developmen­t our current system’s promise of wealth creation for the poor are reminiscen­t of a ponzi scheme. It offers false hope, perpetuati­ng a cycle of poverty rather than breaking it. True reform is needed, where education is no longer designed to trap the poor in an illusion of prosperity, but rather serves as a catalyst for equitable opportunit­ies and sustainabl­e socio-economic transforma­tion. Only then can we dismantle the intricate webs of inequality and pave the way for a genuinely inclusive society. Kumbirai Thierry Nhamo

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