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May 23, 2012
Manila, Philippines
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As Cost of Education Rises, Dropout Rates Among Filipino Youths Soar

Published on May 30, 2009

According to Palatino, half of the unemployed in the country belong to the youth sector. One-third of newly graduates do not immediately get employed.

“If we have a good quality of education in elementary and high school, not all youth need to enter college. In other countries you can still be employed even if you just finished high school. In our country, you need to finish and have a college degree for all kinds of available decent jobs,” said Palatino.

Under-Investment of the Government

Palatino also criticized the low budget of the national government for the education sector. “In other countries, tertiary education is highly subsidized by the state. In the Philippines, higher education is dominated by the private sector,” he told Bulatlat.

Palatino said that the ideal spending on education should be 18 to 20 percent of the national budget, but the average spending on education in the Philippines is only 13 percent. The amount is equivalent to only 2.3 to 2.4 percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). This is way below the prescribed standard of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (Unesco), which states that six percent of GDP must be allotted to education.


Kabataan Rep. Mong Palatino: Half of unemployed are young Filipinos. (Photo by Glaiza May Muzones)

Because of the limited budget given to public schools, the funds provided for the facilities, salary of teachers, learning materials, and even school feeding programs are also inadequate, Palatino said.

He said that despite the free tuition in public schools, it would cost around P15,000 ($316.78) to P20,000 ($422.38) to send a student to a public school. This amount covers the auxiliary needs of students that include school fees, books, school supplies, uniform, transportation, and food.

Due to the small allocation of budget in education, public schools are forced to collect fees for other services.

Moratorium on Tuition Hike

Palatino co-authored House Bill No. 2440 titled “An Act Imposing a Three Year Moratorium on Tuition and Other Fee Increases on All Educational Institutions,” principally authored by Bayan Muna Rep. Teddy Casino.

The three-year moratorium on tuition hike will serve as a temporary relief for students in accordance with the estimate of the National Economic Development Authority (NEDA) that the current economic crisis would last for three years.

The bill is pending in the Lower House.

For now, Glenn, like many other Filipino youth, will have to strive on his own to realize his dream. “I want to go back to college and receive a diploma,” he said. (Bulatlat.com)

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7 Responses to “As Cost of Education Rises, Dropout Rates Among Filipino Youths Soar”

  1. As Cost of Education Rises, Dropout Rates Among Filipino Youths … « Education Blog Says:

    [...] See the original post:  As Cost of Education Rises, Dropout Rates Among Filipino Youths … [...]

  2. A mini-Critique on DepEd’s Preschool Sex Education Program « Uber2002's Blog Says:

    [...] There is this stat which shows that out of the 100 Filipino students that enter elementary only 58 will reach high school. Out of that 58, only 23 will reach college. Out of that 23 only 14 will actually graduate college. [...]

  3. nilo Says:

    Students tend to drop-out because of financial capability and unfamiliar environment.

  4. Without a salary hike, government employees ill equipped to meet school opening expenses - Bulatlat Says:

    [...] In high school, the CSR have dropped even more: from 71 to 55. Which means, of course, that school dropout rates have [...]

  5. How Different Are We? | Vittana Says:

    [...] Commission on Higher Education (CHED) in the Philippines reported on the dropout rate in 2008; of 100 students that start school in 1st [...]

  6. Philippines news: Getting ready for K+12 | Pinas.Net Says:

    [...] based on additional data in 2008 from the Commission on Higher Education (CHEd), out of 100 Grade One pupils, only 66 finish Grade Six. Only 58 of the 66 go on to enroll in [...]

  7. Getting ready for K+12 Says:

    [...] based on additional data in 2008 from the Commission on Higher Education (CHEd), out of 100 Grade One pupils, only 66 finish Grade Six. Only 58 of the 66 go on to enroll in [...]

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