Nexus between Kenya’s Higher Education Financing, Equity and Quality: Implications for Policy and Practice
Abstract
My journey towards this inaugural lecture dates back to 1998/99 when I was the director of
studies. I sat in the committee that identified needy students for bursary allocation in high
school and came face to face with not just the high number of needy cases but also what I
considered a flawed means testing tool. This inspired my study on, Equity implications of
bursary as a method of financing secondary school education as the Lorenz curve and Gini-
Coefficients for all the years studied measured above 0.5 index. Later, I delved into the
unending challenge of Equity in Access to University Education in Kenya through HELB
Loans in Relation to Demand Supply and Effectiveness in Loan Recovery. The focus was on
the strong link between equitable financing of university students and increased access to
higher education recommending amendment of the HELB Act 1995 to make it more effective
in loan recovery. HE financing in Kenya has been marked by shifting socio-political regimes
determined by micro-economic fluctuations and policy shifts of international funding
agencies. I identify and trace four distinctive evolving phases of funding which underpin the
current state but all of which have implications on equity and quality. I link these with my
works of over 20 years to establish the nexus between financing, equity and quality. Inability
by HELB to effectively recover funds from past loan recipients is established implying that
efforts towards creation of a revolving fund to minimise financial burden on the exchequer
remains a mirage. A strong Justification for increased financing of HE is advanced on the
link between growth in the ratio of tertiary education enrolments and growth in national
income, signalling a departure from earlier education policy for developing countries that
put higher premium on investment in primary education. The new VSLF model is
recommended as it will increase revenue at the disposal of HE institutions. MOEST is urged
to invest in a technical study to establish the actual cost of programmes in each university
without relying on individual university costing of programs and use it to improve the model.
Similarly, the proportions of students in each household category be determined scientifically
and imputed into the funding formula. HELB is urged to embrace means testing app (MTA)
akin to the ‘Odemmusta app’ rather than means testing instrument (MTI) to render the
process more efficient, convenient, cost-effective and verifiable. I caution that if capital and
salary costs are factored into the costs of the programmes, costs of HE would rise beyond the
reach of most Kenyans. I recommend the amendment of the Procurement Act as it has either
been abused or not been effective in lowering costs of higher education in the procurement of
goods and services.
Collections
- Public Lectures [2]