Egypt’s public universities need to start charging tuition fees; private universities should subsidize state system: Egypt’s higher education system needs to be overhauled to provide better-quality education that caters to the needs of the country’s job market, Hatem Abdelmoneim Ahmed writes for Ahram Gate. For that to happen, public universities must be allowed to trim enrolment figures and start charging tuition. What’s more, Ahmed argues, a portion of the tuition fees collected by private universities should be tithed and directed toward financing public education. He also urges the government to meet the constitutionally-mandated minimum spending requirement on education in the state budget.
More from Enterprise
Inflation unexpectedly cools, putting rate-cut cycle back in play
The first fall in the headline rate in three months…
Qatar’s Green Sky Capital secures financing for USD 200 mn SAF plant
The facility could add more than 10% to global SAF…
New tax bill heads to House ahead of July rollout
The new package scraps the contentious capital gains tax, overhauls…
Apis Partners has continued appetite for Egypt after closing its third fund at more than double its predecessor
Apis partner Hossam Abou Moussa singles out MNT-Halan as a…