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WSWS : News
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& South Pacific : Papua
New Guinea
Papua New Guinea government offers free education in election
bid
By Will Marshall
11 February 2002
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In a blatant pitch for votes in the approaching June election,
Papua New Guinea (PNG) Prime Minister Mekere Morauta claimed late
last year that his government would grant free education for primary
and secondary school children if it gained another term. No
child in government or church schools will pay tuition fees,
he pledged. These will be paid for by the national government.
His promise was also a bid to demand support for the program
of selling off public assets and services laid down by the International
Monetary Fund and Australia, the former colonial power. Morauta
linked the new education policy to the wholesale privatisation
of government entities, including the countrys main bank.
We can afford to do so [remove fees], because of the success
of our privatisation and reform program to date, he stated,
implying that continued opposition to the sell-off would block
the education pledge.
In a public relations exercise, Morauta personally distributed
PNG kina cheques totalling some K2.2 million (about $US600,000)
to National Capital District schools, saying that he was proving
his critics wrong and that the policy would continue, provided
that his government was re-elected.
His promises are a fraud on a number of counts. In the first
place, the K150 million to be allocated toward the Education
Fees for 2002 policy would fall far short of providing a free
education for all PNG children. The education system is vastly
under funded, with staff-student ratios standing at 1:30. By comparison,
in Australiawhere class sizes in government schools are
largethe national average is 1:15.
As many as half PNGs children currently do not attend
school. The removal of fees is likely to enable more parents to
enrol their children, and resources will be totally inadequate
for the increased intake. The business consultancy Price Waterhouse
Coopers noted: The government has announced that it will
provide free primary and secondary education although there would
appear to be no significant increases in the funding of education
infrastructure.
Government officials have admitted that for at least the first
quarter of the year, schools will be funded according to the 2001
enrollment figures. In the National Capital District, Gerehu High
School principal Martin Kenehe said the school had 60 more students
this year who were not covered by the first quarter subsidies.
Coronation Primary School headmaster Gelai Enara said all classes
exceeded the maximum number of 45 students, and some had over
70 students.
In the Enga province, many students face exclusion. The school
board announced that it could not enrol students in Year Seven
due to a shortage of classrooms and teacher accommodation. In
the classes that will run, there will be one teacher to 50 students.
Likewise, several Western Highlands secondary principals said
their schools were facing funding shortfalls, overcrowding and
the prospect of turning away students. Anglimp High School required
at least K90,000 for desks and text books for new Year 10 students,
but was only allocated K64,500 as its first quarter subsidy.
Schools in the remote regions face particular problems, as
their normal running costs are much higher due to transport costs.
Gangang Karim, the outgoing principal of Aiome High School in
the Middle Ramu District of Madang Province, said his school faced
a nightmare. It confronted a budget crisis with students
who had left school some years ago returning to re-enrol. The
shortfall of K300 per student could force the school to send its
400 students home at the end of term three.
At least two provincial administrations have stated that the
funding will be insufficient. Morobe provincial administrator
Manasupe Zurenouc said prices of goods and services had increased
dramatically, and many schools would need increased budgets to
see them through the year. East New Britain education chief Boas
Koro said parents would still have to pay fees to cover costs.
He later withdrew his statement, no doubt under duress from the
central government.
Enga Governor Peter Ipatas, who has allied himself to the ruling
Peoples Democratic Party, initially described the policy initiative
as an election cheat, apparently seeking electoral
gain by distancing himself from Morauta. The national government
did not have the resources to sustain its current policy, he insisted.
At the end of January, Ipatas retracted his comments.
High drop-out rate
A Department of Education report revealed the extent to which
PNG children are denied access to education. It estimated that
about 2 million youth and adultsone third of the populationare
out of school and unemployed in the 13-34 age group. Port Moresby,
the capital, has a jobless rate of more than 60 percent. There
are no unemployment benefits in PNG.
Education Minister Muki Taranupi admitted that an estimated
5 to 10 percent of school-aged children did not even get the opportunity
to enrol in formal education. Of those who did commence primary
school, nearly 50 percent dropped out before reaching sixth grade.
So inadequate is government funding that churches provide up
to 60 percent of places, from primary schools to tertiary institutions.
Both they and the government schools charge fees that are beyond
the reach of many working class and rural families. In Madang,
for instance, parents had to pay K800 per student for secondary
education last year. As a result, most children receive no secondary
or tertiary education and an estimated 55 percent of the population
is illiterate.
Morautas proposals will not overcome these gross deficiencies.
Moreover, any increase in education spending is already being
offset by cuts to the provinces, resulting in a further decline
in health and other services. According to economist Agogo Mawuli,
from the National Research Institute, the government has reduced
funding of the provinces to a level that fails to comply with
constitutional requirements. Mawuli said the allocations were
half of what was expected.
The prime ministers flagrant vote-buying exercise comes
after a year of instability. The survival of his Peoples Democratic
Movement coalition government was called into question twice last
year by popular opposition to the IMF dictated program of economic
restructuring. A military mutiny that won wide public support
in March forced the government to postpone its downsizing of the
army. Two months later government offices in Port Moresby were
besieged for almost a week by a student led anti-privatisation
sit-in.
In order to crush the second protest Morauta brought in riot
police, who opened fire on demonstrators, killing at least four.
For the past four months the government has refused to release
the findings of a five-week inquiry into the deaths. All indications
are the report will exonerate the police, sparking further unrest.
PNGs first post-independence prime minister, Sir Michael
Somare, who recently replaced another former prime minister Bill
Skate, as opposition leader, offers no alternative. He and his
National Alliance have attacked the education initiative from
the right. Dont believe that education will come for
free, as nothing comes for free today, Somare declared.
We have to work hard.
Underlying the lack of basic services is a worsening economic
outlook. Since being granted formal independence in 1975, PNG
governments have been largely reliant on the mining and petroleum
industries to attract investment and generate taxation and export
revenues. Many of the major projects are now nearing exhaustion
and new investment has dropped sharply. According to one estimate,
by Mike Manning from the Institute of National Affairs, the end
of mining and oil operations could wipe out 26 percent of the
countrys gross domestic product in the coming decade.
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