Oxfam South Africa makes submission to fees commission, believes fee-free, quality education is critical in building a more equitable South Africa
20 October 2016
Oxfam South Africa made its submission to the Fees Commission yesterday in which we expressed our view that fee-free tertiary education is no longer an option in South Africa, but a must!
The Commission of Inquiry into Higher Education and Training (The Fees Commission) was established by President Jacob Zuma in terms of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa to explore the feasibility of making higher education and training fee free in South Africa.
OxfamSA supports the immediate implementation of a free, decolonised, quality education, and our submission to the Fees Commission sought to explain why we believe this is possible and to clarify some of the questions which form the basis of this enquiry.
Fee free tertiary education is a constitutional, legislative and policy imperative in South Africa with government legally obligated to guarantee and provide it. Whilst government can mobilise all stakeholders in society to contribute towards achieving its constitutional mandates, government is the primary duty-bearer. Nowhere in the text of the Constitution is there a suggestion that this responsibility may be shared with either parents, business sector, students or any other stakeholder for that matter.