Graduands at a past graduation ceremony. Only a fifth of Helb funds recipients have fully repaid their loans worth Sh6bn. FILE
By DAVID HERBLING
In Summary
- Helb has been relying on the Treasury and recoveries from past beneficiaries of its loans, but the rising number of university students has made it difficult to meet growing demand.
- The board is looking at new financing models including taping corporate foundations and philanthropists as it converts to an education bank by the end of this year.
- The agency is mulling over increasing the interest rate charged on varsity loans or having the government top up a return to education bond holders to a level near market rates.
The Higher Education Loans Board (Helb) is set
to offer education bonds to investors in a new fundraising model that
could raise interest rates charged on university loans.
The board has been relying on the Treasury and
recoveries from past beneficiaries of its loans, but the rising number
of university students has made it difficult to meet growing demand.
Now, Helb is looking at new financing models
including taping corporate foundations and philanthropists as the State
agency converts to an education bank by the end of this year.
The agency is mulling over increasing the interest
rate charged on varsity loans or having the government top up a return
to education bond holders to a level near market rates.
Presently, post-graduate students pay a rate of 12
per cent on Helb loans while those taking undergraduate studies pay
four per cent, but the board could move the rate higher once
beneficiaries enter the job market.
“We will assemble an array of attractive products
for long-term capitalists with interest in education to patronise,” said
Charles Ringera, chief executive of Helb, adding that the board would
target low interest rate markets like Japan.
The board has the challenge of compensating
investors at market rates given that the bulk of the bonds in the market
are priced at about 12.5 per cent. For instance, I&M Bank paid 12.8
per cent when it sought to raise Sh3 billion via a bond.
But Mr Ringera said that the board was pursuing
number of options. First, it could restrict funding from the education
bonds to post-graduate students who pay 12 per cent interest rate.
Secondly, it could turn to low interest markets.
The board could also review interest rates levied on undergraduate
students, or have the government top up the returns.
“Alternatively, the Government underwrites the
difference because constitutionally it is its responsibility to educate
citizens,” said Mr Ringera.
Streamline
“We could also think of tiers in our pricing — in
college we charge four per cent and from the fifth year we move that to
seven per cent since the beneficiaries will be earning — which will be a
big cooling effect on the overheating cash flow engine.”
Mr Ringera said the new strategies to plug the agency’s growing financing gap were part of a raft of proposals made by a task force appointed by President Uhuru Kenyatta to streamline parastatals.
The board estimates that it will require Sh14.3
billion to meet higher education financing needs this year — yet it was
only allocated Sh4.9 billion by the Treasury and collected a total of
Sh3.3 billion — translating to a gap of Sh6.1 billion.
Demand for Helb loans has increased sharply due to
the double-intake in public universities and the creation of new
varsities. The board finances more than 80 per cent of university
students who are fully dependent on government loans.
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