Pakistan's Higher Education Commission Faces Dire Budget Shortfall
By Shailaja Neelakantan
The government agency that finances and oversees Pakistan's universities is facing a huge budget shortfall, potentially hobbling the country's higher-education system, according to news reports.
The agency, the Higher Education Commission, is on the verge of bankruptcy, the commission's chairman Javaid Laghari told The News, a Pakistani newspaper. The News said the commission had not received "a single penny" of the $183-million that the government allocated to it for 2010-11, and that the money may be transferred to pay for relief efforts in flood-damaged areas of Karachi.
Mr. Laghari said he is also concerned about $45-million that U. S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton pledged to the commission last October, and other American foreign aid meant to improve the country's higher-education system. He said Pakistan's Finance Division may include the overseas assistance as part of the already approved Pakistani government allocation, thereby awarding the commission no new funds.
The lack of funds will hurt universities that the agency provides financial support to for construction projects, student scholarships, and other programs. "The universities face a default of around $58-million, which they have to pay to the contractors but have no money with them," Mr. Laghari told the newspaper.
"Every country, even Saudi Arabia, is shifting from resource-based economy to knowledge-based economy, but in our country the situation is altogether different," Mr. Laghari said. He added that it would be "a great national loss as we could spend $175-million merely on the construction of roads" but could not spend the same amount on education.
Mr. Laghari said this is not the first time the commission's budgetary needs have been ignored. In January last year, for example, financial constraints forced the Pakistani government to suspend plans to create nine engineering schools that foreign universities had agreed to set up there with their own faculties and administrators.
In addition to the budget woes, the Higher Education Commission is involved in a recent political imbroglio. It is verifying the university degrees of the nation's 736 parliament members and 25,000 university faculty members and administrators as part of a nationwide effort to weed out fraudulent degree-holders.
Source:
http://chronicle.com/article/Pakistans-Higher-Education/123910/
By Shailaja Neelakantan
The government agency that finances and oversees Pakistan's universities is facing a huge budget shortfall, potentially hobbling the country's higher-education system, according to news reports.
The agency, the Higher Education Commission, is on the verge of bankruptcy, the commission's chairman Javaid Laghari told The News, a Pakistani newspaper. The News said the commission had not received "a single penny" of the $183-million that the government allocated to it for 2010-11, and that the money may be transferred to pay for relief efforts in flood-damaged areas of Karachi.
Mr. Laghari said he is also concerned about $45-million that U. S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton pledged to the commission last October, and other American foreign aid meant to improve the country's higher-education system. He said Pakistan's Finance Division may include the overseas assistance as part of the already approved Pakistani government allocation, thereby awarding the commission no new funds.
The lack of funds will hurt universities that the agency provides financial support to for construction projects, student scholarships, and other programs. "The universities face a default of around $58-million, which they have to pay to the contractors but have no money with them," Mr. Laghari told the newspaper.
"Every country, even Saudi Arabia, is shifting from resource-based economy to knowledge-based economy, but in our country the situation is altogether different," Mr. Laghari said. He added that it would be "a great national loss as we could spend $175-million merely on the construction of roads" but could not spend the same amount on education.
Mr. Laghari said this is not the first time the commission's budgetary needs have been ignored. In January last year, for example, financial constraints forced the Pakistani government to suspend plans to create nine engineering schools that foreign universities had agreed to set up there with their own faculties and administrators.
In addition to the budget woes, the Higher Education Commission is involved in a recent political imbroglio. It is verifying the university degrees of the nation's 736 parliament members and 25,000 university faculty members and administrators as part of a nationwide effort to weed out fraudulent degree-holders.
Source:
http://chronicle.com/article/Pakistans-Higher-Education/123910/