In Zimbabwe, parents barter goats and labour to pay school fees

After the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education urged schools to accept payment in kind in the impoverished nation.

September 06, 2017 05:12 pm | Updated 05:18 pm IST - MWENEZI (ZIMBABWE):

Zimbabwean children sit at their desks inside their classroom at the Warrent Park 1 Primary School in Harare in this file photo. In the acutely impoverished south African nation, an average of 10 children share a single text book and some schools have no books at all.

Zimbabwean children sit at their desks inside their classroom at the Warrent Park 1 Primary School in Harare in this file photo. In the acutely impoverished south African nation, an average of 10 children share a single text book and some schools have no books at all.

A goat bleats, digging its hooves into the ground to stop itself being dragged on a rope through the school gate by a determined parent, as pupils look on excitedly.

At Chomutsvairo Primary School in Mwenezi district, cash-strapped parents and guardians wait to hand over their goats to the school authorities in lieu of tuition fees.

The school in the southern province of Masvingo was set up on a cattle farm repossessed from a white farmer during Zimbabwes commercial farm seizures, which began in 2000.

Have a goat, but no money

“I have no money, and this goat I am holding is the one I am using to settle school fees for my child doing Grade Five,” said Gift Gondombwe, explaining that the government is now letting parents pay for education with livestock.

Some 80 metres away, about 10 other parents and guardians busy themselves pushing wheelbarrows full of bricks, sand and other building materials, offloading them in the school yard.

“We thank the government,” said one of the labourers, Juliet Sibanda. “Many of us had no money for school fees, neither do we have the livestock to use in paying for our childrens tuition, but we have our labour to render to the school as payment.”

Liquidity crunch

With Zimbabwe beset by a deepening liquidity crunch, the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education has urged schools to accept payment in kind.

As the country’s manufacturing sector has declined over the years, cash circulation has plummeted.

Early last year, the central bank steadily reduced cash withdrawal limits, pegging them at $500 a day in March. This year, they were cut further to $50.

But banks are still unable to dispense enough cash to meet demand, with depositors queuing up outside branches in a daily battle to get their money.

Penury grips most of them

As the southern African nation’s economic woes worsen, government figures show that nearly three-quarters of its 14 million people live in poverty.

Three years ago, a government programme, backed by aid agencies and the United Nations, started taking care of school fees for 7,50,000 under-privileged children.

But donor support is insufficient as more and more families need help, prompting parents to look for other ways to cover school fees.

Some 13,000 pupils countrywide dropped out of school last year due to unpaid fees, according to ministry data.

Scepticism

In April this year, Lazarus Dokora, Zimbabwe’s Education Minister, told state-controlled weekly newspaper Sunday Mail that schools needed to be flexible and allow local people to work for them or trade animals instead of paying fees in cash.

But some parents, like Jimson Chirinda from Mwenezi district’s Mindamirefu village, are sceptical.

“If parents keep bringing goats to schools as payment for fees, will the goats turn into money? Who will buy the goats? Definitely no one, because there is no money in villages here,” he said.

Sylvia Utete-Masango, Permanent Secretary at the Education Ministry, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, that the head teachers should value the goats brought in by parents and sell them to well-to-do community members, including teachers, using the proceeds to develop their schools.

“Stone Age”

But some civil society groups have criticised the in-kind payment system as archaic.

“Paying with goats is akin to taking our society backwards to the Stone Age, where barter trade was used,” said Robson Chere, secretary-general of the Amalgamated Rural Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe. The practice decimates local peoples social and economic traditional fabric, he added.

The trade union puts the number of parents and guardians with children in school at 4.5 million countrywide, and estimates 60 per cent have resorted to using livestock and their own labour as a way of paying school fees.

But for some parents like 46-year-old Dambudzo Makiwa in Mwenezi, whose three children dropped out of school last year, using livestock to cover school fees is a non-starter.

Life has become so difficult

“Life has become so difficult for me — I no longer have goats ... because I sold them all to meet other needs at home before they became acceptable to settle school fees. I can tell you very few families still have livestock in the village here,” he said.

Mr. Makiwa said he had limited skills and would only be able to get labouring work as a building assistant. “There is not much money in that job, which means I will still fail to raise the school fees,” he added.

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