Thursday, May 21, 2015

Over 100 Organisations Around the World Express Deep Concerns About World Bank Support for Privatisation in Education

This post is from Bank Information Center - Amplifying Local Voices to Democratize Development.

Today, more than one hundred national and international organisations across the world released a joint open statement addressed to the president of the World Bank, Jim Kim. The statement expresses their deep concerns about the World Bank’s expressed support for the development of a multinational chain of low-fee profit-making private primary schools targeting poor families in Kenya and Uganda, Bridge International Academies (BIA). It comes as a response to a recent speech of the president of the World Bank, Jim Kim, who praised BIA as a means to alleviate poverty.

Graphic: Just $6 a month? This is what it would cost half of the population to send 3 children to World Bank supported for-profit private schools if counting tuition fees and other costs in Kenya and Uganda - Up to 68% of monthly income in Kenya; Up to 75% of monthly income in UgandaIn his speech delivered earlier in April, the World Bank president stated that “the cost per student at Bridge Academies is just $6 dollars a month”. This suggestion that $6 is an acceptable amount of money for poor households to pay reveals a profound lack of understanding of the reality of the lives of the poorest. Kenyan and Ugandan organizations have calculated that for half of the population in Kenya and Uganda, spending $6 per month per child to send three primary school age children to a Bridge Academy would cost at least a quarter of their monthly income. These families are already struggling to be able to provide three meals a day to their children.

Graphic: World Bank Investment in Profit-making Private School Bridge International Academies in Kenya and Uganda: 10 million USD. World Bank Investments in Kenya and Uganda's Public Basic Education System: 0 USDWith signatories including community-based, national, and international organisations, as well as networks and trade unions representing thousands of organisations and millions of individuals in five continents, the statement reflects a growing global movement questioning policies in support for private education in developing countries, including from the World Bank. The statement was written and signed by 30 organisations in Uganda and Kenya, which are the countries primarily affected by the World Bank policy, and received the additional support of 116 organisations.

Read More:

  • The full text of the statement can be found here
  • The cover letter addressed to Dr. Kim is available here

 

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Read Full Story from Bank Information Center » News http://www.bicusa.org/over-100-organisations-around-the-world-express-deep-concerns-about-world-bank-support-for-privatisation-in-education/
This article by Natalia Margolis originally appeared on bicusa.org on May 14, 2015 at 08:01PM

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