The Speaker of the House of Representative, Rt.
Hon Abbas Tajudeen has subtly advocated for increased
school fees if Nigeria universities were to compete with their Counterpart
across the globe.Tajudeen stated this while delivering a pre convocation
lecture with the Theme harnessing technology to drive Nigeria’s transformation
agenda at the Federal University of Technology, Minna recently.
He lamented that Nigeria Universities face chronic
underfunding, which has several impacted infrastructure, research capabilities,
and overall educational quality.
”While the expansion of Universities in Nigeria aims
to increase access to higher education, it often leads to stretched resources
and diminished quality.
”According to him, there is an urgent need to explore
a more strategic approach focused on enhancing existing institutions through
improved funding and resources allocation by drawing lessons from successful
funding models employed by Universities globally and within Africa.”Globally,
Universities adopt diverse funding models that reduce reliance on Government
allocation”
In the United Kingdom, higher education funding is a
shared responsibility between taxpayers and graduates; the government covers
approximately 35% of teaching cost, while Graduates (parents) contribute 65%
through tuition fees and loans”He noted that, in the United Kingdom, the
government allocates around six billion pounds annually to support research in
higher education with Universities also generating significant income from
private donations, endowment and research grants.”Similarly, in the United States,
Universities rely on a mix government funding, private donations, endowment,
and income from research grants, for example, Harvard University endowment
stood at $53.2 billion dollars in 2023, which is greater than the whole budget
of the entire west Africa countries.
“Tajudeen challenged Nigeria Universities to borrow a
leaf from other sister African countries where several universities have
successfully diversified their funding sources to reduce dependence on
government allocation.” The University of Cape Town in South Africa, for
instance, generate over 60% of its revenue from non-governmental sources,
including tuition fees, research grants, and partnership with private sector
organizations”There (UCT) research funding alone reached R 2.3 billion
approximately $120 million dollars in 2023 enabling it to maintain world class
research facilities and attract top tier faculty.”
The Speaker insisted that, to address these
challenges, Nigeria Public Universities must diversify their funding streams,
but commended the University of Lagos for embracing this new approach.
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