Nzimande and Nene must prioritise NSFAS ahead of Medium Term Budget
23 September 2015
The DA notes the claim made by the Minister of Higher Education and Training, Dr Blade Nzimande, that “[the government] is committed to free higher education for the poor who are deserving to get it.” We welcome this statement which is consistent with DA policy. But unless Minister Nzimande urgently tables a comprehensive plan to ensure this apex priority is a reality, and to overcome all the obstacles facing his Department, this is nothing but hollow rhetoric.
I will therefore write to Minister Nzimande requesting that we work together and appeal to the Minister of Finance, Nhlanhla Nene - as National Treasury’s custodian - to reprioritise the medium term budget to deal with the massive shortfalls in funding for tertiary education. If Minister Nzimande is at all serious about the comments he has made, he needs to support this action to get his colleague in Cabinet to pay due attention to this problem ahead of his Medium Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS) in October.
In October last year, the joint Portfolio Committee on Higher Education and Training and Appropriations was told that the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) would require an additional R51 billion to meet its proposed targets which is to ensure that every poor and deserving student gets the necessary funding they so desperately need for a better future. Furthermore, the Department continues to set hugely ambitious targets for student admissions. The White Paper on Higher Education and Training, which Minister Nzimande is tasked with implementing, proposes that a further 2.3 million students be admitted into Universities and Colleges.
This is an enormous number. We are seriously concerned that NSFAS will not receive the required appropriation and that thousands of the poorest students will be admitted into Universities and Colleges, but left to fend for themselves once again.