Beneficiaries must be monitored
THE government and Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba had no option but to make good on former President Jacob Zuma’s hasty announcement that tertiary education for the poor would be government-sponsored.
If they had not, it would have had serious repercussions for the ANC.
This consideration was noble, all things considered.
However, the financial constraints and implementation of such an act, in my view, were not well thought through.
The budgetary implications have to be severe in the long term and safeguards must be put in place to ensure that recipients of such aid must not view this simply as a hand-out or an entitlement.
It must be remembered that it is not the government that is helping these indigent students but the taxpaying public of South Africa.
To this end, assistance must be afforded across the board without any racial bias or favour shown to any particular racial group as there are people of every hue who suffer economic desperation.
In this regard, strict and enforceable encumbrances must bind these students to repay what the people have graciously afforded them.
First, they must be contracted as bursars with the caveat that, on completion of their studies and upon securing employment, they must repay their obligation so that other similarly deserving students can be assisted, thereby reducing the burden on the taxpayer.
Mechanisms must be put in place so that no bursar will be able to escape such an obligation.
Second, it must be an express condition that should they fail an academic year of study, the next year’s financial obligation would be for their own account and not the people’s obligation, notwithstanding the fact that they were still duty-bound to repay what had been previously afforded to them.
Frivolous and vexatious excuses for failure or non-performance must be closely scrutinised and acted upon accordingly.
Third, mechanisms must be put in place to monitor the performance of these bursars through an academic year to ensure that the people’s investment is not going to waste.
This is important, noting that not all who receive such assistance will be genuinely interested in or committed to furthering their studies and many will see this as an opportunity to “enjoy” life for gratuitous pleasures.
While education is a vital pillar upon which the success of any nation rests, and accepting the fact many of our brethren are financially impotent to pay for tertiary education, any assistance given must be bound by a reciprocal responsibility that can have a domino effect that will benefit generations, who will be equally in need.
NARENDH GANESH Durban North