Question marks remain over whether âfreeâ higher education in South Africa will be successfully rolled out for the upcoming academic year, while there are still âdeep concernsâ about the long-term sustainability of the new funding system, the head of Universities South Africa has warned.
South Africaâs outgoing president Jacob Zuma announced in December that he would âextend fully subsidised free higher education to [those from] well over 90 per cent of South African householdsâ.
Under the proposal, which will take effect for those starting university in February, any student from a household with a combined annual income of less than R350,000 (ÂŁ20,700) will be eligible for free tuition and financial support.
But Ahmed Bawa, chief executive of Universities South Africa, said that it has been âquite a challenge to roll out the programmeâ, given the short notice.
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âWe really are anxious about this yearâs registration period. We just didnât have enough time to put in place a sufficiently well-thought-out process,â he told Times Higher Education.
The new system is âfunctionalâ at most universities but it is âstill very early to say whether we will have a successful roll-outâ, Professor Bawa added.
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Universities also âhave deep concerns about the sustainabilityâ of the programme, he continued.
âWeâd like to understand much better where the money for the new bursary system comes from. Every time weâve proposed changes in the past weâve always been told that thereâs no money,â Professor Bawa said.
âThere might be an argument made that this is really not your problem. Well, it is our problem, because if two or three years from now thereâs a pulling back on the proposed programme, that would lead to chaos.â
During a visit to a high school, Mr Zuma said that he had ordered officials to âstop government programmes to get money for free educationâ, according to . However, he did not specify exactly which government programmes he was referring to.
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Finance minister Malusi Gigaba recently said that the estimated cost of the model had been finalised and will be announced in Februaryâs budget.
In January, three of South Africaâs leading universities â the University of the Witwatersrand, Stellenbosch University and the University of Johannesburg â said that they would not be able to accept any new applications for the 2018 academic year because of the late notice. This would mean that there would be no improvement in access for poorer students at those institutions until next year.
But Professor Bawa said that universities and the government have implemented a clearing-style system to ensure that prospective students who now want to apply to university in light of the new funding system are ânot turned awayâ.
He added that there was âno questionâ that the model would improve university access to and retention of poorer students.
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âWe are all quite excited. If we can get it to work and if itâs a sustainable programme, it has the potential to be hugely effective in bringing into the higher education system 90 per cent of South African households,â he said. âPoor and working-class families wonât have to worry about where to find the money for their children to study at universities if theyâve been admitted to a university.â
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