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Increased private-public partnerships imperative in Zimbabwean education
Bulawayo Progressive
Residents Association (BPRA)
January 25, 2012
The year 2012
comes with the beginning of a new academic year, increases in school
fees and levies, expensive new uniforms and an impending strike.
Even though education plays a critical role in any nation's
economic, political, socio-cultural and technological development
as it helps people to participate fully in society and governance,
the Zimbabwean academic year has commenced with clouds of uncertainty
hanging nationwide. It is the onus of every government to avail
and fund education but this responsibility is outsized and complex
for the government of Zimbabwe to meet sufficiently. It is thus
imperative for the government to explore alternative means of financing
and affording educational services. This article will examine how
public-private partnerships can help Zimbabwe meet its education
goals.
Proficient and
equitable access to education is proving to be elusive to many people
in Zimbabwe as often low-income families, girls and other previously
marginalized groups have only limited access to education. Several
Sub-Saharan countries have yet to achieve universal primary education
even though enrollment rates across all developing countries increased
by 4 percent between 1991 and 2006. The collapse of the Zimbabwean
economy during the past decade is the source of scores of present
day challenges for the country's education system. It brought
about with it failure by the government to finance the rehabilitation
of learning infrastructure as well as the procurement of textbooks
which are an essential resource of any education configuration if
it is to function both efficiently and effectively. Zimbabwe's
economic downturn meant that remuneration paid to teachers by the
government was below the Poverty Datum Line contrary to salaries
offered by other countries in the region, thus teachers resorted
to industrial action as a means of protesting against a failed government.
This course of action produced an education sector which was fraught
with stay-aways, go-slows and outright strikes with little or no
education taking place. Education was put into further jeopardy
by the mass exodus of qualified and experienced teachers who abandoned
the profession in pursuit of greener pastures within and outside
the country. The number of school dropouts increased, attendance
became haphazard while pass rates declined.
Given market
failures and equity concerns, the public sector remains an important
player in providing education services, but making quality education
accessible and affordable to all in a developing country like Zimbabwe
requires innovative programs and initiatives in addition to public
resources and good leadership. There are several ways in which the
public sector and the private world can join together to complement
each other's strengths in providing education services and
help Zimbabwe meet the Millenium Development Goals for education
and to improve learning outcomes. These public-private partnerships
(PPPs) can be tailor made and precisely targeted to meet the needs
of low-income earners.
Public-Private
partnerships are defined as " . . . any arrangement between
a government and the private sector (inclusive of CSOs) in which
partially or traditionally public activities are performed by the
private sector." These arrangements must not be confused with
privatization that entails the total purchase of public entities
for commercialization. The phenomenon of PPPs in Zimbabwe is neither
alien nor new. Government recognized this critical role of the private
sector in 2004, and developed underpinning PPP investment guidelines
in this country. These guidelines provided the parameters for the
development of an appropriate legal and regulatory framework, to
protect the interests of the investors and the consumers. Various
stakeholders contributed to the development of the PPPs' legal and
institutional framework in 2007 in Kariba, and in 2009 in Harare,
leading to the development of a comprehensive "Legal and Institutional
Framework for Public-Private Partnerships in Zimbabwe" document,
which should guide relevant Ministries.
The country
has previously benefited and continues to benefit from PPPs especially
in the arena of infrastructure development. For example . . . recently,
the government launched the National Manpower Advisory Council (NAMACO)
with a mandate to explore possibilities and opportunities for PPPs
in the Higher and Tertiary education sector that already has other
corporate players such as Mimosa Mining Holdings, Econet Private
Limited, BAT, UNILEVER and Metallion Gold through its scholarship
programs.
However, PPPs
in the education sector have been limited to the involvement of
multilateral donor organizations such as PLAN
International and World
Vision together with churches such as the Anglican Church and
the Roman Catholic Church that have either seen the establishment
and management of schools, provision of resources and technical
expertise. The involvement of the corporate sector however, remains
subdued/limited. This can be attributed to the economic downturn,
the long-term cost recovery of education, the bureaucracy of government
systems and the absence of incentives to motivate corporate involvement
in the sector.
In light of
the challenges facing the education sector, it has become more than
imperative for increased PPPs in education as best practice from
across the globe informs one that for quality education to be a
reality, the efforts of government alone, be it central or local
government, is insufficient. An education industry producing the
needed human capital for the development of this country needs the
aid of the corporate world. Its performance affects and determines
the quality and magnitude of Africa's development and indeed that
of Zimbabwe. It forms the basis for developing innovation, science
and technology in order to harness our resources, industrialize,
and participate in the global knowledge economy and for Zimbabwe
to take its rightful place in the global community. It is a means
by which Zimbabwe will entrench a culture of peace, gender equality
and positive African values. The inclusion and participation of
the corporate world, the inevitable beneficiaries of a good education
system, must be prioritized as it entails a number of merits. Public
Private Partnerships offer a less radical alternative to the sometimes
controversial and less desirable wholesale privatization as in the
case of Herentals Group of Colleges buying Cold Comfort Primary
School.
Education as
managed by governments has proven to contain a lot of red-tape and
conservatism that often impedes the process and management of education
in the country. PPPS offer the opportunity for enhanced managerial
performance, entrepreneurial spirit through capacity-building and
staff retention measures.
Best practice
from Pakistan and India reveals a partnership that has seen the
involvement of information technology companies in the education
sector with the resultant improved access to leading edge technologies.
Intel, the global technology giant, has been responsible for the
introduction of computer technology in schools while also participating
in the training of computer tutors. Zimbabwe can also learn from
the experience by engaging industrial companies in metal work education,
clothing companies in fashion and fabrics and culinary entities
in food and nutrition tuition. Already, football teams have realized
this avenue with Bantu Rovers adopting Mzilikazi High School, sponsoring
it with soccer skits and equipment.
The Zimbabwean
education sector has not been divorced from the poor, corrupt governance
system that is a common feature in Zimbabwean life. Communities
and school authorities have been at loggerheads due to the lack
of transparency, popular participation and accountability in the
administration of incentives and school projects. PPPs offer an
opportunity for improved transparency through involvement of local
communities from project formulation, design, implementation and
evaluation.
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Progressive Residents Association fact
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