With students rioting across the country and arson the order of the day, few problems are more pressing but with a new solution in sight the mayhem and destruction is becoming all the more senseless.
It has been discussed in a series of meetings involving all of South Africa’s stakeholders, including student groups.
In a nutshell the model aims to provide funding for students whose parents or caregivers earn less than R600 000 a year. This is considerably more than is currently available through NSFAS and would include students that fall into the so-called “missing middle”.
It is also designed to address SA’s acute skills shortage – there will be increased focus on funding those qualifications that are in demand, as well as scarce skills, says Nxasana in the Moneyweb interview.
“What we are trying to do is resolve the skills supply / demand imbalance that exists in the country.”
Strong relationships between business and institutions of learning
Business will build stronger relationships with institutions to ensure that the students produced are employable. This means ensuring that curricula are relevant and of high quality.
“With a few exceptions mainly in professional qualifications, this has hardly been done before,” says Nxasana.
Behind the scenes, the private sector has seconded people who are working to ensure the model is financially and economically robust and sustainable.
Ultimately it will include NSFAS funding, as well as private sector funding, donations and debt funding. The new B-BEE codes suggest that private sector firms voluntarily contribute 6% of payroll, up from 3%, to skills funding. On the debt side, the model envisages various levels of debt funding including social bonds, DFI funding and commercial funding from long term investors such as pension funds.
Nxasana is loath at this stage to put a figure on the size of the funding pot, or the number of students that the system will be able to fund – although he has a rough estimate in mind.
Public policy, tax and legislative requirements
Assuming all goes well with the pilots, Nxasana is hopeful that the full funding programme can be rolled out in 2018. Initially it will run parallel to NSFAS and as and when NSFAS is capacitated, the two will merge.
Read the original article on Moneyweb.