As the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (Nsfas) faces a mountain of issues, the Independent Institute of Education (IIE) wants universities to take over the fund.
Nsfas has faced a lot of criticism for maladministration, failure to pay students on time, providing accommodations, and the recent dissolution of its board, amongst others.
The board was dissolved by the Minister of Higher Education, Science and Technology Blade Nzimande, earlier this month following allegations of maladministration.
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Reacting, IIE managing director Dr Linda Meyer told The Citizen that widespread reforms are needed at the fund.
“The Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) already disburses billions of rands in university grants directly to universities. There is therefore no reason why the funds that NSFAS received from DHET, cannot be paid by universities and TVETs for disbursement to students,” said Meyers.
She said the system worked with minor challenges when universities paid the money directly to their students, and so it should revert back to its former state.
Meyer said corruption within the scheme is endemic, and minor changes to its leadership and systems are futile.
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“The fact is that the corruption within NSFAS is so endemic and structural that changes to the board will accomplish nothing. The issues are deeply embedded in the organisation’s procedures, culture, and perhaps even its informal norms and practices,” Meyer added.
According to Meyer, Nsfas is an unnecessary middleman that should be completely disbanded. The IIE director said all the scheme does is apply a band-aid to its crises instead of fixing the problem.
“The Nsfas transformation requires more than cosmetic changes. It demands a commitment to transparency, a willingness to confront corruption head-on, and the establishment of robust systems,” she said.
When asked what reforms she would make if given the power to do so, Meyer outlined the following six amendments aimed at addressing Nsfas’ current issues:
Comprehensive Audit and Evaluation
Structural Reforms
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Strengthening Oversight and Accountability
Transparency and Engagement
Addressing past injustices
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Innovation and improvement
Meyers said these reforms would “focus on creating a transparent, accountable, and efficient system that prioritises the needs and rights of students, ensuring that higher education is accessible to all based on merit and need, not financial capability alone”.
Student debt is a burden that has long been weighing on millions of South African graduates. Meyers called on the government to settle students’ debts to universities on behalf of them.
The burden of Nsfas paying for everything is the cause of the gradually increasing student debt. The independent director said Nsfas should continue to be free; however, it must only pay for tuition and books.
“Additional allowances should be optional in the form of an interest-free bursary that students should pay back to the government after they secure employment and start earning a minimum threshold.
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The repayment amount should be a manageable as a percentage of earnings recovered by SARS. This will allow the scheme to be sustainable,” Meyers suggested.
Furthermore, she said under this system NSFAS beneficiaries should be given the option to choose whether they want to study at a public or private institution.
The Citizen reached to Nsfas for comment. Response from the scheme will be included once received.
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