University of the Philippines-Diliman’s Quezon Hall and the UP Oblation JULIENNARY VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

Government urged to institutionalize free public higher education

Although additional funds for State Universities and Colleges (SUCs) are welcome, the research group IBON said free tuition for higher education needs to be institutionalized as a right of all Filipinos rather than discretionary, depending on the availability of funds.

If this is made into law,more funds would be mandatorily earmarked to ensure that all SUC  students could avail themselves of free tuition, the group said.

Under the recently approved 2017 national budget, an extra P8.3 billion for tuition at SUCs was granted to the Commission on Education (CHED). This came from the reported realignment of the infrastructure funds for the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM).

IBON said that since the added budget to SUCs was at the discretion of lawmakers

dependent on the availability of funds, it was not enough to cover the tuition of all SUC enrollees at all levels and may not last beyond 2017. By institutionalizing free tuition in tertiary education, the government would be compelled to ensure that enough funds meet the needs of all public higher education students.

Latest CHED data for the 2015 2016 academic year shows that some 1.7 million students are currently enrolled in SUCs. The number includes 152,535 students at pre-baccalaureate level, 1.4 million at baccalaureate, 10,311 at post baccalaureate, 85,969 at masters and 12,152 at doctorate level. Using CHED data on tuition per unit and assuming 18 units per semester and two semesters per year, IBON estimates that the average tuition per student per year is P7,781 at pre-baccalaureate level, P7,246 at baccalaureate, P11,269 at post-baccalaureate, P13,340 at masters and Php16,913 at doctorate level.

This means another P4.4 billion or a total of P12.7 billion may be needed to give free tuition to all 1.7 million SUC students, said the group.

IBON also noted that other considerable expenses such as registration and miscellaneous fees, books and other instructional materials, supplies, food and lodging, transportation, among other things, are not included. Factoring these in would increase the cost of tertiary education as much as five to ten fold.

As a next step to achieve free higher education for all Filipinos, full tuition subsidies for the 112 SUCs at all levels must be mandated by law, said the group. This is necessary considering how there are 4.1 million, mainly youth, enrolled in public and private higher education institutions nationwide. While some students’ families may easily afford more expensive private school education, the majority are likely to come from lower income families burdened by the high cost of education.

IBON said that a higher education system needs to be designed that addresses the needs of the larger number of Filipino families who are poor and, moreover, supports a comprehensive program of rural development and national industrialization.

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