On Raising University Tuition Fees in Jordan and Poor Planning
There is a lot of talk lately about a governmental intention to raise the tuition fees in public universities in Jordan. But while officials in the Ministry of Higher Education dismiss the rumours, many in Jordan have learned through experience that if a rumour is officially dismissed, it will soon turn into reality.
Interestingly, a more controversial measure was taken very recently to provide financial support to public universities in the country. A one JD tax was forced on anyone who had a landline or a cell phone (paid once a year). That means/meant the following:
1- The grand majority of Jordanians currently pay a tax to support public higher education.
2- A large number of these taxpayers do not have access to this public higher education, and they admit their sons and daughters to private universities or to no universities at all. This means they are forced to pay to teach other people’s sons and daughters when they should not.
3- Most of these taxpayers are forced to pay the same tax two or three times, or more. If a person has a landline and a cell phone, he or she will pay the tax twice. His or her sons and daughters who have cell phones will also pay the same tax regardless of their age.
4- Cell phone owners in Jordan already pay 16% sales tax and an “additional” 4.5% tax, which totals 20.5%.* Now it is safe to add this infamous one JD tax to the total cost.
5- This would certainly generate more money for public universities. Public universities already received revenue up to 20-25 million JD from the ambiguous “additional fees” that students had to pay at the start of each semester in 2006.* The revenue generated by the one JD tax, however, is no more than four million JD.** This means that a ridiculous amount of 400,000 JD will go to each of the ten public universities we have.
6- The Ministry of Finance took the trouble to dig as far back as 1985 to find a law to shave money off Jordanians. The law is called: قانون الرسوم الإضافية للجامعات الأردنية رقم (4) لسنة 1985 (Additional Fees Law no.4 for Jordanian Universities, 1985). Not only that, the Ministry took the time to “interpret” the word “phone” in the law and to finally deduce that it is a word generic enough to include cell phones along with landlines.
7- If the Ministry of Higher Education eventually decides that the old-new law does not help it generate enough money to fill the monetary cracks in public universities (and it doesn’t), it just might raise tuition fees.
8- The Ministry of Higher Education finds it easier to collaborate with the Ministry of Finance to impose taxes or to act on its own and raise tuition fees, all instant quick-money solutions, instead of designing long-term revenue-generating projects and plans. If nothing else, this indicates poor planning and poor supervision over the financial assets of public universities in Jordan.
To return to the main topic of this post, even back in July 2006 there was talk about raising tuition fees for public universities. The rumours were dismissed and the Ministry said there will be no changes over the fees in 2006. Well, now we’re in 2007, I wonder if any surprises await us this year.
An important question is this: How much more can the Jordanian citizen pay to get some education? And, even more importantly, is the quality of education provided in public universities in Jordan really worth all this money the citizens are forced to invest?
* Al Rai newspaper
** Al Ghad newspaper
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April 11th, 2007 at 4:22 pm
Increasing public university fees is bad news for paying students but GREAT NEWS for those who will get Makruma (free tuitions). Remember, in Jordan, when you pay you are actually subsidizing someone else’s lifestyle. Unlike the US, for example, where students who can pay subsides those who can’t; in Jordan, those who can barely make ends meet will subsidies the tuition of sons and daughters of rich and powerful Jordanians (you know who you are. shame on you.). How can you fight this sort of corruption when it’s legal? Think of it as charity for they rich.
February 3rd, 2008 at 9:06 am
[...] the university JD for this year , to who don’t know what is this JD u can read more about at Tololy and Nas , also in the newspaper in past Here and Here I was wonder about HOW THEY TAKE TAX ONE [...]
February 3rd, 2008 at 3:41 pm
[...] After the government enforced a law to collect one JD annually from each and every phone line in the…, now we are faced with an ADDITIONAL tax on our airtime. And for what? [...]