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International Partnerships
News announcement23 May 2022ParisDirectorate-General for International Partnerships

Students call on governments to alleviate the high costs of education on the poorest families

european students union youth report

As the 82nd Board Meeting and 40-year anniversary celebration of the European Students’ Union begins, the Global Students Forum join UNESCO’s GEM Report #RighttheRules campaign urging policy leaders to strengthen oversight of private actors so that the poorest are not priced out of education.

Students from around the world have joined forces today via the Global Students Forum to support UNESCO’ Global Education Monitoring (GEM) campaign called #RightTheRules. The campaign warns governments that weak oversight of private actors is leading to rising inequality in education that excludes the most marginalised children. It calls for political leaders to fulfil the promise they made to provide 1 year of pre-primary and 12 years of free primary and secondary education for all.

The campaign was developed on the back of GEM’s flagship publication called: “Who Chooses, Who Loses?” which assesses the impact of non-state actors in education. It finds that costs for private education including private tuition, technologies and school fees are too high and are increasing the financial burden on low-income households. The Global Youth Student Forum (GSF) have partnered with GEM to release an accompanying youth report to mobilise support for the recommendations of the report highlighted in the #RightTheRules campaign.

The campaign draws attention to the hidden costs of education. Despite the promise of free schooling, parents are burdened with extra costs such as uniforms and books. One third of household education expenditure in low- and middle-income countries comes from households whose children attend public schools.

“The choices families in low-income countries are faced with are dire. They are either priced out of high-quality schools or forced into unregistered cheap ones, which are likely to offer lower quality of instruction. Yet only one in four countries regulates the amount of fees charged by private schools. This campaign is calling on governments to step up the oversight of private actors and ensure equity and inclusion are at the heart of their efforts”, said Sebastian Berger, Director of the Global Students Forum.

Private schools and private supplementary tuition are also pushing up these costs for households. Globally, 3.2% of household budgets is spent on education on average but that rises to 6% in countries where a high share of enrolment is in private schools.

The sharp cost of education is especially felt by those who are trapped in poverty. The poorest families are being forced to borrow to send their children to school, according to the report’s findings. New analysis shows that an estimated 8% of households borrow, ranging from 6% in high-income to 12% in low-income countries, and rising above 30% in countries such as Haiti, Kenya, the Philippines and Uganda.

“In the poorest countries one in twelve families have to borrow to send their children to school. Parents face the impossible choice of paying either for their children’s education or for food. Governments must ensure that the poorest – often girls – aren’t robbed of a good quality education. The EU will do its part, including by increasing support to education to at least 10% in our partner countries. We work with young people for equity and inclusion. With the upcoming first-ever Youth Action Plan for external action, the EU will amplify young people’s voices and empower them even further”, added the European Commissioner for International Partnerships, Jutta Urpilainen.

“Regulations are crucial in levelling the playing field and making sure that the most disadvantaged have an equal opportunity to thrive. The poorest should not be penalised because others are able to pay more for their education.”, concluded Manos Antoninis, Director of the Global Education Monitoring Report.

The campaign is calling on governments to:

  • Monitor household spending on education – and make sure the poorest are neither priced out of high-quality schools nor stratified into lower quality schools
  • Improve the enforcement of regulations of private education but also use such regulations to promote equity and inclusion in education.


About the Global Education Monitoring Report

Established in 2002, the GEM Report is an editorially independent report, hosted and published by UNESCO. At the 2015 World Education Forum, it received a mandate from 160 governments to monitor and report on:

  • Progress on education in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), with particular reference to the SDG 4 monitoring framework
  • The implementation of national and international strategies to help hold all relevant partners to account for their commitments, as part of the overall SDG follow-up and review process.

About the Global Students Forum

The Global Student Forum (GSF) is the umbrella organisation of the international student movement and was founded in 2020 by the All-Africa Students Union (AASU), Commonwealth Students’ Association (CSA), European Students Union (ESU), Organising Bureau of European School Student Unions (OBESSU) and the Latin-American and Caribbean Continental Student Organisation (OCLAE). The GSF represents the interest of 202 member unions and student organisations from 122 countries and territories towards the decision making bodies of the international community.

More information on the Event

The GEM Report, the Global Students Forum and Fédération des Associations Générales Étudiantes (FAGE) will co-host the global launch of the 2022 GEM Youth Report at the 40th anniversary celebration of FAGE.

Details

Publication date
23 May 2022
Author
Directorate-General for International Partnerships
Location
Paris