President
Rodrigo Roa Duterte signed last August 3, the Universal Access to Quality
Tertiary Education, which grants full government subsidy to tuition in all
state universities and colleges (SUCs).
Public
is aware that the president’s economic managers have expressed their opposition
to the said law, and yet the president still signed it, since it is the popular
thing to do.
Last
week, Mr. Gerardo P. Sicat of the Philippine Star (CROSSROADS (Toward
Philippine Economic and Social Progress) wrote an article about this topic
titled “ How do we budget for ‘free college education?’
Full
article of Mr. Sicat is quoted below:
Last
week , the President signed into law a bill that provides free tuition for
college level students who enroll in government supported institutions.
Affected
by the new law are all state-supported universities and colleges, local
tertiary government schools and training institutions under the TESDA
(Technical Education and Skills Development Authority).
Disappearing tuition income of state-supported
educational institutions. By
making tuition free, this law virtually removes the ability of the educational
institutions to earn any tuition income from students.
Budgetary
allocations might enable the institutions to pay for a lot of their operational
needs, including salaries and wages, but tuition income gives them enormous
flexibility in managing their affairs.
Now,
this source of flexibility disappears with the abolition of tuition income. The
institutions will now be totally exposed to government budgetary support.
The
relevant question then is whether the government can sustain the quality of
support essential to make free tuition a successful social policy?
The
cost of the free tuition policy is high to a government strapped by many
expenditure needs. Our present predicament requires that priority be given
toward removing major economic gridlocks that could be solved by amassing
resources to solve the infrastructure needs.
High budgetary cost. Estimates of the new budgetary
requirements have varied from as low as P16 billion to as high as P100 billion.
The former is from the Commission on Higher Education, and it is suspect for
being too low. The budget department has made much larger estimates of the
cost, but it is still uncertain. Most estimates seem to indicate that the
initial amount would be near the ballpark figure of P25 billion early in its
implementation, but could rise over time.
The
main issue for government financing is whether it is economically sustainable
without a major effort at further tightening the budget, either through additional
taxes (over and above those projected under the comprehensive tax reform
program) or a major pruning of some public expenditure to accommodate the needs
of free tuition.
Failure
to provide the required budgeting effort could derail part of the economic
program. The large spending could fan inflationary pressures and threaten
macroeconomic stability. This is an important issue for economic management.
New
spending that supports government schools represents a fiscal expenditure jolt
because of its size. It threatens to widen the fiscal deficit. For a new law
with a large spending requirement, the calculus for its implementation simply
depends on more budget appropriation.
An
implication that requires to be watched is that the additional spending abets inflationary
pressure if no new taxes are collected or no reduction in spending elsewhere is
undertaken.
Senator
Panfilo Lacson, who had not used any pork barrel funds, had suggested removing
pork barrel from Congress could finance the budgetary demands of free tuition.
While
Congress passed the free tuition bill in almost no time, one wonders if the
speed of action would have been achieved if the legislators faced a trade-off
involving the loss of their pork barrel allocations.
Finance
Secretary Sonny Dominguez suggests another way to finance the needs of the free
tuition law. He zeroes in on the problem of “right-sizing” the national
government.
Estimates
being made in the right-sizing bill indicates that by removing 38,000
government workers, it is possible to save as much as P50 billion in spending.
This is a sizable gain in efficiency and could enable substantial financing of
large new spending arising from the free tuition law.
There
appears to be no easy way out. Both the proposed measures will test the
political will of the government. They are difficult measures, much more
difficult than legislating benefits without having to account for the costs.
What happens to the quality of education? Many studies indicate
that our state-supported universities and colleges do not produce the expected
quality of the educational output that we aspire for.
While
there are some cases of rising educational institutions within the public
tertiary system, in general, however, the quality of output has not been
improving sufficiently for all institutions.
It
is unlikely, therefore, that educational output will improve if there is less
certainty of the adequate budgetary support of the institutions. The system of
free tuition would weaken the fiscal position of many universities and colleges
if we judge them by what they have produced in the past.
Implications on private universities. Free tuition could
lead to a displacement of student enrollments in private schools as some
students might be induced to enroll in public schools.
Thus,
a consequence would be an increase of student enrollment in some state
universities and colleges at the expense of private schools. The drop in price
of schooling to zero tuition cost for college could lead to the closure of some
private universities.
In
the case of the University of the Philippines system, there is no danger that
it would attract enrollees from other private schools other than those who
could qualify to pass the strict entrance requirements. This could not be said
of other state-run schools where the standards of admissions are similar to
those of private schools.
If
such is the case, the free tuition law could enlarge demand for schooling in
state-supported institutions and to some extent, could threaten the viability
of some private sector run schools that might lose enrollment.
However,
it is likely that schools that provide a high quality of educational product
would be able to hold their own and survive competition from a university
system that offers free tuition.
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