The right to education
The Jakarta Post I Fri, 07/31/2009 9:16 AM I Opinion
Nearly
75,000 senior high school and vocational school graduates logged on to the
State University Admissions Association (PSPMBN) website on Thursday to see if
they had passed the exams held earlier this month.
Less than 7,800
seats were available at seven state universities, including the favorite
University of Indonesia, in the joint selection program, because most positions
had already been taken through admissions exams held independently by the
individual institutions.
Higher education,
however, remains a luxury for the majority of Indonesia's younger generation.
Universities, state and private, can accommodate only one third of more than 2
million senior high school graduates annually. And the competition for
admission gets tighter every year because often those who failed in previous
years go back to try for a second or third time.
Those who do not
make it into state universities can turn to private institutions, which have
gradually proven they can match state universities in terms of the quality of
education they offer. However, such students must spend more because private
universities rely entirely on tuition fees to operate.
Financing higher
education has been a controversial topic for decades. The government once
allocated huge subsidies to state universities to provide university access to
as many students as possible. In reality, however, most of these subsidies went
to students of upper and middle income families, who did not qualify for
government assistance at all.
Now that the
subsidies have been set at only one-third of the educational budget, following
the enactment of the 2008 law on educational institutions, state universities
have been allowed to collect public funds to stay afloat. And they will need to
collect an increasing amount of funding as the educational standards and
expectations also evolve to meet the demands of an increasingly competitive job
market.
The government has adopted two clear-cut policies
concerning higher education, the outcomes of which are the same because they
both sacrifice students from poor families. As National Education Minister
Bambang Sudibyo once said, higher education is indeed expensive.
And with the government still struggling to make sure the
mandatory nine year education program remains on track, it is almost unlikely
that a free higher education policy will be put in place in Indonesia. This
does not mean the government can leave higher education to the market
mechanisms either.
The Constitution
mandates that the state (the government) must guarantee every citizen's right
to education. The government's presence is felt when it takes actions for the
people's sake.
The government
could allocate more funds to provide scholarships or perhaps loans to those who
can't afford to pay soaring university tuition fees. Students who take out
loans will have to pay back their borrowings in installments once they get jobs
so that the money can be passed on to other needy students.
The government
could also build new state universities, particularly outside Java, to tap in
to an increasing number of high school graduates. Major cities in Java have at
least three state universities, compared to one in each provincial capital
outside this densely populated island.
Private universities may participate in the
education-for-all campaign without having to bear more financial burden. They
need incentives to provide university access for more disadvantaged students,
which could take the form of tax breaks or other fiscal policies. A number of
companies have translated their concerns about higher education for all by
offering scholarships as part of their corporate social responsibility
programs. But only a limited number of students will be accepted.
In the end, the full responsibility of national education
remains in the government's hands - but that's what the government is there
for. With more daunting challenges ahead, the success of the education-for-all
program will determine the nation's survival.
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