IT may be true that every journey
begins with a single step. But when it comes to education, especially in low
and middleincome countries, we have a long way to go.
Fortunately,
many efforts are now underway to help these countries cover the distance and
reach the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) of ensuring quality education for
all by 2030. As a special envoy for the International Commission on Financing
Global Education Opportunity, I have led highlevel delegations to 14 countries
across Africa. On those visits, I witnessed firsthand the commitment of the
continent’s leaders to undertake reforms and boost investment in education.
But if the SDG
on education is to be achieved, African leaders’ commitment must be matched by
commensurate support from the international community, potentially through an
International Finance Facility for Education (IFFEd). As matters now stand, the
international community is falling short in this area – particularly when it
comes to financing.
Even as many
countries in the developing world have stepped up their commitment to improving
and expanding education opportunities, education has remained chronically
underfinanced, with funding levels far below what is needed to achieve
education benchmarks.
Since 2002,
education’s share of official development assistance (ODA) has actually fallen,
from 13 per cent to 10 per cent. The Education Commission’s groundbreaking
Learning Generation report makes clear what is at stake, particularly for
African countries that have long suffered from education shortfalls.
By 2050,
Africa will be home to a billion young people. By 2030, if current trends
persist, only one in ten young people will be on track to gain basic
secondary-level skills in low-income countries, the majority of which are in
Africa. Simply put, we now risk compromising the future of an entire
generation.
But that
outcome can be avoided. The Education Commission’s report also shows that
progress on education reform, coupled with more effective spending, could
increase access to education, boost completion rates, and improve learning
outcomes considerably.
To advance
these goals, the Education Commission proposes a financing compact whereby low-
and middle-income countries would agree to increase domestic public expenditure
on education from an average of about 4 per cent of GDP today to 5.8 per cent
of GDP by 2030, while implementing reforms that ensure the efficient use of
resources.
In exchange,
the international community would increase its financing over this period, from
about 16 billion Dollars per year to some 90 billion Dollars, as well as
provide coordination mechanisms to ensure the most efficient use of funds.
ODA would have
an important role to play in delivering on the compact. And, indeed, the
Education Commission calls for increasing education’s share of ODA to 15 per
cent. But even with such an increase, more funding will be needed. That is
where the IFFEd comes in.
The IFFEd
would bring together bilateral donors, the World Bank, and regional development
banks in a coordinated manner, enabling them to pool their resources and
leverage idle capital where appropriate. Once in operation, the IFFEd could, by
2020, mobilise 13 billion Dollars annually in additional resources for
education in countries determined to invest in and reform education.
The IFFEd
would not be a handout. It would support countries, many of which already
invest a significant portion of their national budgets in education, in their
efforts to achieve the SDG on education.
It is the
biggest, boldest, and most profound step we can take to ensure that the next
generation is not lost, but learning. In partnership with Education Commission
Chair and former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, I have taken several
steps to advance the creation of an IFFEd.
The first step
was to determine which countries, if any, saw the need for it and would be
willing to do the work needed to benefit from it. So, when visiting an African leader,
I would ask a simple question: In light of the Education Commission’s report
and action plan, would they be willing to commit to the levels of education
investment and reform required to qualify for IFFEd assistance? The leaders of
all 14 countries I visited said yes.
Indeed, they
not only expressed their interest in becoming “pioneer countries”; all of the
leaders I met declared that such a breakthrough was both critical and long
overdue. Now comes the hard part: turning rhetoric into reality and commitment
into progress.
With the
demand for an IFFEd well established, we are ready to bring the call for a mass
mobilisation of international finance for education to those who can make it
happen. We will do so at the IMF-World Bank Spring Meetings this week, at the
G20 summit in July, and at the United Nations General Assembly in September.
We will
continue taking steps to advance education reform and development where it is
needed most. We hope that, before long, the international community will join
us, by participating in the IFFEd.
Only if we all
work in unison can we fulfil our promise to have all children in school within
a generation. As we take further steps to achieve this vital goal, we should be
inspired and guided by the words of Nelson Mandela: “Education is the most
powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”
We can achieve
a world-changing education revolution within a generation. But everyone needs
to play their part. The author is the former President of Tanzania and member
of the International Commission on Financing Global Education Opportunity
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