Botswana Guardian

Kibaki’s capitalist outlook on education brought mixed results

- ( The Conversati­on)

Emilio Mwai Kibaki, retired third president of independen­t Kenya who has died, had a rich and multifacet­ed legacy as a long serving public official.

But it is in education that he left an indelible, but complex, mark.

Kibaki’s personal achievemen­t as a highly accomplish­ed intellectu­al looms large over his long policy and political career. A graduate of Makerere University College and the London School of Economics, he became a member of parliament at independen­ce in 1963. This set the stage for his appointmen­t in the executive.

He rose from an Assistant Minister of Finance and chairman of the Economic Planning Commission in 1963 to become Commerce and Industry Minister in 1966. He was appointed Finance and Economic Planning Minister in 1969, and became Vice President in 1978. He held the finance docket until 1982.

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President Daniel arap Moi demoted him to Health Minister in 1988. Three years later Kibaki left the ruling party to form the Democratic Party. He became president in 2002, a position he held until his retirement in 2013.

Kibaki’s influence on education in Kenya became visible in the early years of independen­ce when government spending on education rose steadily. By the 1970s, Kenya devoted 30 percent of its budget to the sector. As chairman of the economic planning commission, he had a major role in drafting government policy plans that guided the country’s ideologica­l and policy thrust.

Kibaki gave Kenya’s education a free market capitalist­ic orientatio­n. Documents such as the 1964– 70 Developmen­t Plan and the 1965 Sessional Paper No. 10 show how he wanted to introduce cost- sharing through a loans scheme for university students.

Many years later, Kibaki’s first major policy pronouncem­ent as president was the declaratio­n in January 2003 that primary education would be free.

While he favoured mass education for all Kenyans, his capitalist orientatio­n paved the way for entry of private providers. Also, although he generally supported provision of free basic education, especially at primary level, he disapprove­d of fully subsidised higher education. Instead, he favoured cost- sharing and privatisat­ion.

FREE- MARKET ADHERENT

As a free market adherent, Kibaki worked closely with the policy advisors from the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund. In the early 1970s, Kenya was among the non- oil producing countries that experience­d budgetary constraint­s following the sharp rise of global oil prices. Kenya turned to the Bretton Woods institutio­ns for financial support.

As was to become the norm, the institutio­ns would only advance support on condition that government­s reduced recurrent expenditur­e. Education was one of the areas targeted for cuts.

The IMF and the World Bank required that government implement the university loans scheme that it had outlined in its policy plans.

Senior education officials opposed the scheme but were overruled by Kibaki, then Minister of Finance.

The scheme became official in July 1974. This marked a fulfilment of Kibaki’s desire to control higher education expenditur­e.

Under the scheme, the government would continue providing free tuition to university students. But it would advance them loans to cover expenses such as accommodat­ion, food and books.

The loan advanced to students attracted annual interest of 2 percent and repayment would commence 3 years after graduation.

The first university cohort to be advanced loans graduated in 1977, with their first loan repayments due in 1980.

But the scheme never succeeded. The main reason was due to failure by the ministry of education to enforce recovery. This failure marked the flagging political fortunes of Kibaki in the early 1980s. He steadily became eclipsed politicall­y by the newcomers in Moi’s government.

The final blow to the loans scheme came in 1982 when Kibaki was transferre­d to the less glamorous ministry of home affairs. This ended a 13- year- run as minister of finance. He retained the vicepresid­ency until 1988. It was not until 1995 that Moi’s government revived the university loans scheme. This was done through the creation of the Higher Education Loans Board.

Kibaki would further reveal his free market inclinatio­ns in 1984. As the country’s vicePresid­ent, he contradict­ed the education officials who had refused to recognise degrees offered by two pioneering private universiti­es. These were the United States Internatio­nal University and the Catholic Higher Institute of Eastern Africa ( now the Catholic University of East Africa).

The Ministry of Higher Education had accused the United States Internatio­nal University of providing substandar­d education. And it had denied a request by the Catholic Higher Institute of Eastern Africa to convert to a university.

Kibaki insisted that government had no “restrictio­ns on the setting up of private universiti­es in the country.” This is documented by Michael Kithinji in his investigat­ion of the dynamics that influenced the developmen­t of university education in Kenya and East Africa before and after independen­ce.

Kibaki’s interventi­on helped open the doors to the flourishin­g of private universiti­es.

COMPLEX LEGACY

During his presidency Kibaki pursued a duo policy of free basic education and largely unsubsidis­ed higher education, with mixed results.

The introducti­on of free primary education had an immediate impact on primary school enrolment. The student population rose by more than a million from 6.3 million in December 2002 to 7.6 million by the end of 2003.

Some analysts have faulted Kibaki’s free primary education program for causing overcrowdi­ng and overburden­ing teachers. But criticism overlooks the existing neglect and decay of education facilities that Kibaki encountere­d when he became president.

The challenges caused by free primary education only served to uncover the deep malaise that had hindered educationa­l access to thousands of school age children.

Expansion of primary education exerted pressure on higher levels of learning. To accommodat­e the growing numbers of students completing primary education, the government and communitie­s across the country establishe­d additional secondary schools especially for day scholars.

Similar transforma­tion occurred at the university level where the number of full and constituen­t public universiti­es increased dramatical­ly and private sector ones from a handful to over 25.

But universiti­es, both public and private didn’t live up to their calling as centres of excellence due to minimal research output. And university expansion under Kibaki happened at the expense of other tertiary institutio­ns. The majority of vocational and technical institutes converted to universiti­es.

This meant that the 80 percent of students who missed university admission lacked opportunit­ies to gain profession­al or artisanal skills.

Kibaki’s policies on education demonstrat­e his promarket position that endeared him to the Bretton Woods institutio­ns and the West in general. It is therefore not surprising that in 1974 Time Magazine ranked him among the top 100 individual­s around the world with the potential to become head of state.

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