The new funding model for higher
education is flawed and ineffective, an
audit review has concluded, casting
doubt the idea championed by
President William Ruto would work.
In a new report, Auditor General
Nancy Gathungu says a review of
documents and interviews with
fund management revealed critical
challenges in the model.
“The effectiveness of the
new funding model for higher
education in supporting students
funding requirements could not be confirmed,” she said in the review of
the Universities Fund accounts as of
June 30, 2024.
It emerged the new funding model
has neither a link to the Higher
Education Loans Board and the
Technical and Vocational Education
and Training department, nor other
government agencies dealing with
higher education students’ support.
“There is no coordination between
the other government agencies
dealing with higher education
students’ support,” Gathungu said.
Auditors further established the
new model was not integrated
with the Kenya Universities and Colleges Central Placement Services
(KUCCPS) system.
This means there is no seamless
tracking of students from placements
in the universities to funding.
Gathungu said her analysis of
students’ payments report revealed
payouts to students who could not
be traced to their learning institutions,
as the entries had no registration
numbers.
There were students whose
registration numbers were duplicated.
It also emerged 15 students got
more than half a million yet had not
been placed by the KUCCPS.
Scholarships were paid to students who had either deferred their studies,
not reported, or were expelled during
the year.
“As such, the effectiveness of
control over scholarship management
processes could not be confirmed,”
the report reads.
After taking over the reins, Ruto
adopted a funding model, which
shifted towards a system where higher
education loans and bursaries were to
be awarded based on financial need.
A means testing instrument
employed in the fund classifies
students into five financial bands
within which they are allocated the
amounts to facilitate their learning
and tuition fees.
The instrument was to ensure
targeted support through scholarships,
loans and household contributions.
But the review established that data
submitted by students seeking loans
was inaccurate, leading to distorted
scores in the means testing instrument.
Auditors said many students were
not aware of the fund, with the
limited public awareness leading
to an information gap among the
intended beneficiaries.
Gathungu has also raised
inclusivity concerns as it emerged
vulnerable groups such as students
with disabilities or those from
marginalised regions faced difficulties
accessing the fund.
“There were also emerging concerns
on unique challenges, such as those
faced by Muslim students who
require Sharia compliant financial
products, further hinder inclusivity,”
the auditor general said.
She is further concerned the fund
may not sustain itself considering the
low repayment rates for loans issued
to students.
"Loan repayment burden due
to high unemployment and
underemployment rates make
it challenging for graduates to repay their loans, increasing their
default rates and threatening the
sustainability of the fund,” Gathungu
said.
The university funding model
took off on a turbulent note, with
stakeholders lamenting it did not
guarantee equity, fairness in the
distribution of student loans and
scholarships.
Owing to the teething problems,
students have had to wait for long to
access loans, some of which remain
outstanding as of Thursday, with a
promise they’d be paid by on Friday.
Last December, a court declared the
new funding model unconstitutional,
citing it for being discriminatory,
hence violating students’ right to
education, and that it was not
subjected to public participation.
In the ruling, Justice Chacha Mwita
said the government’s responsibility
in funding public universities and
passing the responsibility to parents
was a violation of the constitution.
The courts held the “legitimate
expectation of the citizens was
violated” in the rollout of the new
varsity funding model – officially
called Variable Scholarship and Loan
Funding (VSLF) model.
In the case, the litigants, among
them Kenya Human Rights
Commission, Elimu Bora Working
Group, Boaz Waruku and a students’
caucus, convinced the judges the
new model locks out thousands of
students.
They reasoned the model has to
a large extent hampered learning
in universities, hence amounted to
a breach of the right to education.