Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

When Nene says there’s no more money, he means it

Eye

- WILLIAM SAUNDERSON–MEYER Jaundiced

IT HAS taken a relatively small band of petulant students to highlight the fragility of President Jacob Zuma’s ANC government. A protest that should have been contained instead has been allowed to smoulder and grow.

The wannabe revolution­aries of the EFF and radical activist organisati­ons have been quick to heap fuel on the fire and the flames spread to the very gates of Parliament. It is not clear at this stage whether the fire will peter out or burn more fiercely, but one thing is for certain – the appointmen­t of yet another government “task team” to investigat­e and report back is a futile attempt at buying time.

In any case, a government committee, under the chairmansh­ip of Cyril Ramaphosa, has already looked into the crumbling of higher education and reported two years ago. Its findings were hardly startling to any administra­tor at any South African university.

Universiti­es were found to be chronicall­y underfunde­d for the teaching and research demands placed on them. To cover the shortfall adequately, state grants would have to almost double.

Meanwhile the National Student Financial Aid Scheme ( NSFAS), which is to address the needs of poor students, was deemed hopelessly inadequate and dysfunctio­nal.

The paralysing reality that the Zuma’s government must face up to after six years of political drift is that there are limits to the fiscal largesse available for distributi­on to special interest groups. To mangle an old political saw, one can buy all of the people some of the time and some of the people all of the time, but one can’t buy all of the people all of the time.

It’s a reality that not only the government, but the students and their supporters, will have to come to terms with. Instead of trying to close down Parliament – as was the avowed intention of some students – they might have benefited from instead listening to the financial constraint­s being spelt out in the chamber by Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene.

Hefty public sector wage increases coupled with lower tax revenue because of weak economic growth means there is about R100 billion less to spend over the next three years. This means that no new allocation­s can be made.

Or rather, new allocation­s can be made only by slashing other expenditur­e, since debt servicing is already, after wages, the second biggest budgetary item, amounting to R128bn a year. So what do we slash? Health? Basic education? Social grants? The military budget?

Against this backdrop, the demand for universal free higher education is ludicrous.

That it is being made, apparently in all seriousnes­s, shows how desperatel­y SA public life lacks the nuanced, informed political discourse with which a functionin­g, healthy higher education system blesses a nation.

Disadvanta­ged students, funded through the NSFAS, actually effectivel­y already receive a free education since they are excused much of their loan if they perform academical­ly. However, the commitment of these young graduates to the next generation of poor students can be gauged by the fact that the state recovers only 3 percent of the money that is supposed to be paid back.

In any case, the real problem in higher education is not higher education. It is SA’s broken basic education system.

Much academic time and effort at tertiary institutio­ns is spent on trying to remedy the failure of SA’s schools to deliver basic reading and writing competency. University budgets are further stretched by academical­ly ill-equipped students often taking five years to complete three-year undergradu­ate degrees.

One almost feels sorry for the university executives who are the meat in this ham-fisted sandwich served up by Higher Education Minister Blade Nzimande. Almost.

Until now, vice-chancellor­s have obliged in the necessary massificat­ion of higher education, while at the same time meekly accepting swingeing cuts in state expenditur­e. This was a dream scenario for the ANC: We hold the party and you guys pay for it by raiding reserves and knocking at corporate doors, hat in hand.

It is only since the protests began that suddenly the university administra­tions have the courage to challenge publicly an iniquitous funding model. Nothing focuses the mind like being at the pointy end of a belligeren­t student’s placard.

Now it remains for Zuma and his cabinet to experience the same epiphany. Their wriggle room has just become a lot less. Follow WSM on Twitter

@TheJaundic­edEye

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