I have noticed the way Jacob Zuma operates is very much like Robert
Mugabe. He operates unilaterally; he surrounds himself with incompetent
ministers and fires competent ministers. Like Mugabe, Zuma seems to think that a
country can never go bankrupt. Zuma’s unilateral actions in announcing free
higher education is meant to help his favoured faction without regard to the
economy. After the court judgements of last week, I do not think Zuma still has
the moral authority to continue ringing these far-reaching changes that will
surely affect the economy. For the record as a person who came from a poor
working class family, I support free funded government tertiary education done
in a responsible way. I started primary school education a few years after
Zimbabwe’s independence. My father before his death in 1990 was a police constable
and my mother was not working. I went to township schools that were fully
funded by the government and I have written in my blog how we used to pay only $6
Zimbabwean dollars per year as school fees up to grade 7. For secondary
education, I also went to township schools and they were very cheap. I only
went to a former group A or a previously whites only school during the days of
segregation (equivalence of a model C school) for the two years of A’Level as
the township schools in my town only went up to O’level at that time.
After A’Level the government was fully funding university
education and students were getting generous grants from the government as
well. For those who did not go to university there were fully funded teachers’ colleges,
polytechnic colleges, nursing training, apprenticeship, training as a
radiographer etc. One could also join private sector or the civil service and
get in house training. I then joined a South
African owned Insurance company and I got trained internally and the company also paid for my
foreign based insurance studies. After the collapse of the Zimbabwean economy
starting with the fall of the Zimbabwean dollar in 1997, now university
education is no longer free and university standards have fallen sharply. Top government
ministers started sending their children to overseas universities to countries
such as Australia, United Kingdom and United States. Now parents who can afford
it now sends their children to South Africa as Zimbabwean universities
standards have fallen and at the same time many university lecturers also left
Zimbabwe due to the poor living standards in the country. Zimbabwe university
degrees are no longer highly regarded. I am sure many people have read how
Grace Mugabe got her doctorate in a record time of only a few months at the
once prestigious University of Zimbabwe. I personally know someone who is working
in South Africa who came to this country already with a Zimbabwean accounting
degree and he is currently again studying for an accounting degree with a South
African university just to get ahead in his career. With unemployment level of
95% in Zimbabwe, I advise my close family members to rather pursue their
degrees in South Africa for better employment prospects. Two years ago a cousin
of mine was complaining that her daughter was pursuing a degree at a Zimbabwe university of which there
was virtually no industry for it in Zimbabwe and she could not get attachment
in order to complete her degree.
Fully funded tertiary education is very important towards
bridging the racial divide gap in South Africa especially as it allows the majority
of the black citizens to acquire the necessary skills and also join the middle
class. In Zimbabwe after independence a lot of black citizens managed to get
training to become teachers, nurses, artisans, managers, lawyers, doctors,
radiographers, economists etc. That is why it was far much easier for skilled
Zimbabweans to settle in United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, South Africa,
Botswana, Namibia etc. when the economy collapsed in Zimbabwe as they had the
necessary skills thanks to the educational policies of the government. Whilst
the government is pursuing that noble goal of skilling its people, it must still
manage the country’s fiscus in a prudent manner so that those newly skilled black
professionals join a growing economy. South African economy is not growing
largely as a result of the way that Zuma has managed this country and there is
looming downgrades, devaluation of the currency, high unemployment etc. I am very
fearful of the reaction of the markets when they open on Monday. We can’t
afford the continuous devaluation in the Rand. As we speak we are paying record
petrol prices even though the oil price is nowhere nearer the $150 per
barrel experienced on the world market a few years ago.
As a parent whose son will be going to university in about 3
years, I am also now looking for overseas university education or private
university education locally. I had a front row seat in Zimbabwe when the decay
started to manifest itself. South Africa seems to be going that way and I am
very worried about what the future holds and the end result will be the same it’s
a question of different cast but with the same script and it will certainly
produce the same result.
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