Last week Friday, Dr Roger Hosein, an economist at the St Augustine campus of the University of the West Indies, recommended that the Government should scrap the Government Assistance for Tertiary Education (GATE) programme, which was initiated in September 2004.
Speaking at a bpTT function at the Hilton to discuss the release of the proceedings of June's revenue management conference, Hosein advocated that GATE be replaced by the Dollar-for-Dollar programme, with the addition of a means test.
Under the Dollar-for-Dollar programme, which was designed under the UNC administration, the State funded paid 50 per cent of the tuition fees for all new students enrolled at seven publicly funded educational institutions.
The Dollar-for-Dollar was replaced by GATE in September 2004, when the PNM administration kept the 50 per cent funding for tertiary-level education but expanded the programme to include approved privately funded, tertiary-level education institutions.
Under the original GATE programme, which lasted from September 2004 to September 2006, students from low-income families would have been able to access up to 100 per cent of the tuition fees if they completed a means test questionnaire and were able to prove that they were unable to afford to pay 50 per cent of the tuition fees.
Under the revised GATE programme, the PNM government scrapped the need for a means test to qualify for Government funding of tertiary education, meaning that for the last seven academic years the Government has paid 100 per cent of the tuition fees for any T&T citizen enrolled in an undergraduate programme at 19 publicly funded, tertiary-level education institutions in six countries: T&T, Barbados, Jamaica, The Bahamas as well as UWI's School of Continuing Studies in Monsterrat and St Kitts.
GATE, according to a November 2011 official report on the programme, also covers 100 per cent of the tuition fees of T&T citizens attending undergraduate courses at 43 private institutions ranging from St George's University in Grenada to Trinidad and Tobago College of Therapeutic Massage. It covers as well 50 per cent of the tuition fees of T&T citizens attending post-graduate programmes.
In the 2006 budget, delivered on September 28, 2005, then Prime Minister Patrick Manning, who was also the Minister of Finance, said: The GATE Programme replaced the Dollar for Dollar Education Plan in September 2004. In my 2005 Budget Statement I indicated that we intended to provide free tertiary education in public institutions by the first of January, 2008. Since then, our revenue situation has improved considerably. I am therefore pleased to announce, Mr. Speaker, that with effect from January 1, 2006, all nationals of Trinidad and Tobago enrolled at public tertiary institutions, namely UWI, UTT, COSTAATT and other institutions where the Government sponsors students, will be eligible for free tuition, that is free public tertiary education."
In my view-and this is something that has been written about in this space since 2005-the decision by the T&T government at the start of the 2006 fiscal year to adjust the GATE programme to pay 100 per cent of the tuition fees of any T&T citizen seeking tertiary education is one of this country's best post-Independence policy decisions.
Dr Hosein describes the payment of 100 per cent of tertiary-level fees by the Government as an inefficient use of State funds and a "manifestation of the resource curse problem at work" because it means that the State is educating citizens whose parents can afford to educate them or who can afford to educate themselves.
By that logic, there should be discriminatory pricing of all of the goods and services provided by the State such as water, electricity, healthcare, primary education and secondary education.
If the logic that GATE is an investment and not a subsidy is not accepted by the current administration, then there is little doubt that "free" secondary education and healthcare would be next.
If "rich" citizens should pay half the cost of tertiary education, why should they not also pay half the cost of sending their children to "prestige" secondary schools."
In fact, if the rich can pay half the cost of education, why should they not pay 100 per cent of it?
The universal funding of tertiary-level education by the State must be seen, not as a subsidy, but as an investment of taxpayers' dollars in the development of the country's human resource capital.
If not by GATE, how is T&T going to achieve a workforce that is able to drive diversification both within its energy sector and into other sectors that would allow the country to continue living in the manner that it has become accustomed.
An argument that the Government should return to only 50 per cent of tuition fees and only fund education at publicly funded institutions is a retrograde step and will mean thousands of middle-income households having to go into debt to educate their children and themselves or not being able to afford it at all.
It would be impossible for T&T to achieve the kind of diversification and entrepreneurship needed to transform the country from an economy whose revenues are dominated by the energy sector without the continued investment that is being made in the tertiary level education from the natural gas windfall.
It can be argued that the GATE programme is also an effective means of medium-term poverty alleviation as there is a clear and indisputable link between attaintment of tertiary-level education and the ability of the recipient to earn an income that places them well above the poverty line.
If, as I am arguing, GATE is an investment in the country's human resources, the most important point, and the thing that should be occupying the minds of the UWI academics, is to determine the return on the investment (ROI) that T&T is getting, how is the ROI being measured and how can that ROI be improved.
It seems that those who designed Dollar-for-Dollar and GATE, did not build in to these systems of state funding of tertiary-level education a method of measuring the ROI, the impact that these recipients of "free" tertiary-level education are having on their society, their community, their families. Even a cost/benefit analysis of the programme would suffice.
UWI's Economics department needs to get cracking on tracking the jobs that all GATE graduates have been employed in since 2004, their incomes and their contributions to the wider society before advancing ideological and theoretical arguments that would limit state funding for tertiary education.
GATE is more than UWI. It's estimated that some 50,000 citizens are granted GATE?funding a year. It would be interesting to find out how many of those accessing GATE are recent secondary school graduates and how many of them are returning to UWI or UTT or SCBS to enhance their education and qualifications-for example, a teacher who is working on a DipEd or on a degree.
Introducing a means test to determine who qualifies for GATE funding has the potential to skew the analysis as a teacher with 12 years service doing a DipEd may be earning over $9,000 a month. Under Dr Hosein's recommendation, this person may be excluded from qualifying for GATE even though the quality of her teaching is likely to improve significantly having done the course of study and she is likely to earn an increment in her salary for her educational attainment.