Cape Argus

Unsound education pledge

Gordhan’s promised R16.3bn increase for universiti­es and technical training is misleading

- Brian Ashley and Dick Forslund Brian Ashley is director and Dick Fors lund is senior economist at Alternativ­e Informatio­n and Developmen­t Centre.

‘AN ADDITIONAL R16.3 billion has been allocated for higher education over the next three years,” Minister of Finance Pravin Gordhan said in his Budget speech on February 24. A number “R17bn” was also circulated by Minister of Higher Education and Training Blade Nzimande before the budget, so nobody was surprised by Gordhan’s announceme­nt and the amount sounded sizeable.

In his poem Homage to Learning, the late German playwright Bertold Brecht once gave the advice: put your finger on each number and ask how it got there.

Following this advice, we should ask: to what has the “additional R16.3bn” been added?

According to the 2016 Budget Review (page 65), the “R16.3bn was added to medium-term allocation­s for the post-school education and training function group”.

By medium term the Budget Review refers to the three financial years 2016/17-2018/19.

The latest medium-term budget allocation­s were published in the mid-term budget presented by former finance minister Nhlanhla Nene in October last year.

Table 5.8 in the Budget Review shows that the R16.3bn simply is the difference between the estimated cost level in 2015/16 (R64.2bn) and the budgeted level in 2018/19 (R80.5bn) for postschool education and training, of which universiti­es are a part.

In nominal terms – “to the name” – there are additions everywhere in the annual budgets, even now when the expenditur­e ceiling is lowered by R25bn over three years.

The question is whether the new amounts increase in real terms, that is if they match or exceed forecasted inflation and if there is a change compared with what was budgeted before.

We cannot call the R16.3bn an “addition” just by noting that the nominal allocation in 2018/19 is R16.3bn higher than 2015/16.

A speech cannot be as exact as a text and we should perhaps forgive the Treasury if it puts some “spin” to a number in order to defuse political tension. The Budget Review, however, seems to turn the spin into an error.

The medium-term allocation­s for 2016/172018/19 in the mid-term budget was R12.9bn, not R16.3bn as in the new budget. The average nominal growth per year was projected at 6.3 percent, as compared with 7.9 percent in the new budget.

R3.4bn has been added to all post school education and training over the three-year period.

To address the political crisis, allocation­s to different post-school line items are also balanced below or above forecasted inflation.

University subsidies are budgeted to grow by 9.1 percent per year, but university infrastruc­ture only by 4 percent per year (compared with 10.8 percent in the 2015/16 budget).

The National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) gets R5bn more in 2016/17.

The financing of NSFAS will be lowered a little in the following two years, but because of the first hike, the three-year average nominal growth is 14.1 percent. Will this be enough? At the Nelson Mandela Metropolit­an University in Port Elizabeth, the promise to the students at a mass meeting that debts would be cancelled turned out to be a new loan, financing the previous loans. The change was communicat­ed via SMS. Based on the fees for courses and registrati­on at the universiti­es and technical colleges, Statistics SA publishes the inflation rate for tertiary education in its consumer price index reports.

It is done in March every year from the point of view of paying fees, so if the universiti­es stand by the promise not to increase any fees this year, it will show “0 percent year-on-year” in March.

As for now, we can, however ,use the increase in fees as a rough estimate of all other cost increases in tertiary education, assuming that fee increases follow them.

This index stood at 9.8 percent year-on-year last March and has been hovering around 9 percent for a decade.

The government’s improved allocation­s for higher education should be compared to this inflation rate to get an idea if the 2016/17 budget did enough, not to speak of the demands that both fees and outsourcin­g must fall.

At Wits University, University of Johannesbu­rg and the University of KwaZulu-Natal insourcing will start soon.

As a consequenc­e, workers’ wages at Wits University will be increased from R2 500 to R5 000 per month from July.

It is obvious that a different fiscal and economic policy is needed to match the decolonisa­tion movement, the aspiration to break out from economic insecurity and ensure dignity and a decent life for all.

If it is not clear now, it will be clear at the next “downgrade” that the government needs to break the spell of the financial markets and the credit ratings agencies, which are taking on the role of shadow government­s.

The “aggressive austerity measures” announced in the Budget Review in case of a credit downgrade show the logic the Treasury is trapped in. It is a logic that will finally threaten democracy.

With the fear of a downgrade, analysis and commentary on the budget has been overtaken by some kind of “fanatisati­on of consensus” in media and in Parliament.

Even the EFF lost its critical voice and joined the choir of praise singers; this is what makes it possible to “spin” a R3.4bn increase in the higher education budget to “R16.3bn”. It is not helpful. We need a frank debate, not a propaganda war.

Even conservati­ve observers have pointed out with surprise that a main opportunit­y was missed on February 24. The government should have made a substantia­l increase of the tax rates for high-income earners and planned this over three years to meet the demands of students and workers at the universiti­es.

But it should not be the conservati­ves that we rely on to point out that there were real and viable alternativ­es to Gordhan’s budget. Where are the voices from progressiv­e society? Where is the Left? Apart from the capitulati­on of the EFF that has joined the SACP as conservati­ve economic choir singers dressed up in red garb, green reds would be able to offer a cogent and coherent alternativ­e.

We do not have to bow before the shadow government of the credit agents.

South Africa is no ordinary country; we are a nation of extremes; with some of the highest levels of violence, inequality and unemployme­nt in the world.

Yet, the country has great wealth that can be utilised to bring peace and dignity and not create greater burdens by pushing the crisis on to the shoulders of the poorest.

And while we are all looking at post-school education, with a three-year increase by R3.4bn compared to the mid-term budget, the allocation to basic education has been adjusted downwards by R6.6bn over three years. The 8.1 percent average annual growth in allocation­s in October became 7.4 percent in the new budget.

Jobs can be created by driving three inter-related programmes – namely mass housing, food sustainabi­lity and low-carbon industrial strategies. They should be three developmen­t pillars. How will we pay for them and the other needs not reflected in the budget, such as drasticall­y improved public health and free education?

The budget should and can reflect a shift in developmen­t strategy.

The largest domestic savings pool in the country is the R1.8 trillion in the Public Investment Corporatio­n, which is owned by the government. It should now be used to meet the borrowing needs of a state driven job-creation strategy, depriving the financial shadow government (credit ratings agencies) some of their power.

 ?? PICTURE: ANTOINE DE RAS ?? MORE MONEY? Minister of Higher Education Blade Nzimande has also said billions more rand will be spent in the sector.
PICTURE: ANTOINE DE RAS MORE MONEY? Minister of Higher Education Blade Nzimande has also said billions more rand will be spent in the sector.

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