Education sector gets a welcome boost but allocations disappoint
Early childhood development, a critical educational sector, will get only R1.59bn in 2024/25, lagging far behind basic and higher education. By
The education budget will be fattened by more than R26-billion, but more than half of the money will go towards the salaries of staff. And, disappointingly, early childhood development will receive only a small portion of the total allocation.
In the 2024/25 financial year, social services will receive R1.41-trillion from the state. Learning and culture will receive R480.6-billion of this allocation, with the money earmarked for six different purposes (see sidebar).
The standing committee on appropriations in the Adjustments Appropriation Bill tabled with the 2023 Medium-term Budget Policy Statement had recommended that the government should ensure that all qualifying students benefit from the National Student Financial Aid Scheme, so no student should be denied entry to tertiary institutions for a lack of funding. The scheme, which has been mired in controversy – most recently because of irregularly appointed service providers – had asked for R146.9-billion over the next three years.
R271.9-billion will be allocated to health, R265.3-billion to community development and R387.3-billion to social development.
Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana explained that the increase in the education budget was to accommodate R25.7-billion in carry-through costs of the wage increase over the medium term. The Treasury has allocated R251.3-billion over the medium term to pay teachers, doctors, nurses, the police and other public servants.
The budgets for basic education, health and the police are projected to grow in nominal annual average terms at 4.7%, 3.4% and 5.4%, respectively, over the next three years.
Learning and culture have been allotted 24.4% of the total function budgets, with an average annual growth rate of 3.9% for basic education, and tertiary education gets 16.6% – a 4.7% increase.
Early childhood development is critically important in a child’s development because it lays the foundation for their physical, cognitive, emotional and social wellbeing. The early years, from birth to about eight years old, are a period of rapid brain development and learning. This critical sector will receive just R1.59-billion this financial year, which will increase to R2.035-billion by 2026/27.
The early childhood development grant has been allocated R1.59-billion, rising by 6.8% over the Medium-term Expenditure Framework. The school nutrition programme, which provides food to vulnerable pupils in almost 20,000 schools, will receive R9.8-billion in this financial year.