Leave public universities out of privatisation plan

Sports
By Editorial | Jan 30, 2023
The main entrance to the University of Nairobi. [File, Standard]

Trade and Investment Cabinet Secretary Moses Kuria announced recently that the government is planning to privatise some government entities, including public universities. Mr Kuria said investors from Indonesia and the US willing to make multi-million shilling investments in our public universities have been identified.

At face value, and given that Kenya's public universities are wallowing in debt and mismanagement, the proposal appears to make sense. Reduced government funding of public universities gave rise to Module II (parallel degree courses) in universities that somehow managed to bridge the funding gap. Money raised from Module II breathed life into universities but somewhere along the line, things went wrong.

For many years, public universities have moved from one crisis to another, with a number of them incurring debts that run into billions of shillings. Yet despite this dire financial situation, the government's reluctance to increase funding to universities is apparent. Thus, privatising public universities could turn them around, improve the quality of education and save the government a tidy sum of money. But, at what cost?

Mr CS's argument that "investors will use the huge tracts of land universities own by putting it under agriculture and affordable housing units for students and staff" does not hold water. That can be done by technocrats in government employ in conjunction with university administrations.

Granted, our universities are struggling due to all manner of reasons, including political interference, but what needs to be done is to bail them out, not sell them off to foreigners. Bail out public universities and restore them to their rightful places in the global ranking of universities.

Public universities serve the greater good because education is subsidised, thus allowing many from humble backgrounds to access quality education. Poor students cannot afford to study in private universities. The government must not run away from its mandate of providing affordable education to all.

Share this story
School Games: St Mary's Yala and Ng'iya Girls ready to shine again in Siaya
Defending champions Ng’iya Girls and St Mary’s Yala are the teams to watch as the Siaya County Term One games get underway at Ukwala High School in Ugenya Sub County.
Champions crowned but cry to save hockey gets louder
Champions of the Kenya Hockey Union 2025 season were crowned which also ended in joy for promoted teams and sorrow for the relegated who will have to fight again to return to the top.
It's only God who'll save Batoto ba Mungu from relegation
Sofapaka and Ulinzi Stars together with APS Bomet are in trouble of facing the chop from the SportPesa Premier League after the trio lost again in Monday’s matches played across the country.
Why SportPesa racing speedster Varese feels unstoppable
Leading Japanese constructor Toyota will send a formidable line up to battle for honours in the third leg of the 2026 World Rally Championship (WRC), the Safari Rally in Naivasha on March 12-15.
Kenya suspends 27 athletes for doping violations
Kenyan marathon runner Rita Jeptoo, national 400m hurdles champion Wiseman Were, and 25 other athletes have been provisionally suspended for doping violations.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS