Tag: Student Loan

  • UPDATED: Loan scheme to take off with students of Fed varsities, Polytechnics, CoE

    UPDATED: Loan scheme to take off with students of Fed varsities, Polytechnics, CoE

    …portal opens on Friday

    The student loan scheme will take off with students from federal universities, polytechnics, colleges of education, and technical colleges.

    Only students whose institutions have uploaded their data on NELFUND‘s dashboard would be eligible to apply for the loan.

    The portal for students to apply for the loan will open on Friday, May 24.

    The scheme will take off with 1.2m students as beneficiaries.

    The loan, which is an equivalent of the tuition fees of the benefitting students, will be paid directly to their institutions.

    However, stipends would be paid directly to beneficiaries every month to assist them buy other things that can make them comfortable while pursuing their education.

    The Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, of Nigeria Education Loan Fund (NELFUND), Akintunde Sawyerr said this on Monday, May 20, at a news conference in Abuja.

    “The first phase of the application for the portal of student loan programme would be officially opened on the 24th of May, 2024 for students in federal institutions like Universities, Polytechnic, Colleges of Education, and technical colleges, whose institutions have completed and uploaded their students’ data,” he said.

    He added: “This student loan scheme is available to students who are in government institutions at the tertiary level.

    “We are going to start with federal institutions because it is a programme that we have to roll out in phases. It will eventually be rolled out to state-owned institutions.”

    Sawyerr said no guarantor was needed for students to access the loan.

    He said applicants would be required to provide their “Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) letter, National Identification Number (NIN), Bank Verification Number (BVN).”

    He added: “Applicants are also to complete the application, including personal details, academic information, and details of financial need, and submit the application after reviewing it.”

    Speaking on the repayments, he said the loanees, regardless of where they get a job whether they are working with the government or with somebody else, must pay back the loans after two years.

    Read Also: BREAKING: Only applicants from federal institutions can access student loans – FG

    He said: “The student loan scheme will pay 100 percent of the fee for the loanees at the institution. There is also the track of providing stipends to the loanees.

    “We only pay for one session at a time because people drop out of institutions, they change institutions, change their mind about the course they want to do.”

    Speaking about bad loans, he said the agency was trying to make sure that it had as much information about the applicants as possible and be sure that they are bonafide Nigerian citizens and are of good standing.

    “We also have various ways of working with security agencies to ensure that the people who are applying to these loans are not people who may want to defraud,” he added.

  • Student Loan: Obasanjo, Bells VC seek inclusion of private varsities

    Student Loan: Obasanjo, Bells VC seek inclusion of private varsities

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo and the Vice Chancellor of Bells University of Technology, Ota, Prof. Jeremiah Ojediran, have urged the federal government to include students of private universities in the soon-to-commence Student Loan Scheme.

    The duo spoke at the inauguration of the Asiwaju Onafowokan, Coleman Wires, and Cables building at Bells University’s College of Postgraduate Studies in Ota, Ogun State.

     Obasanjo supported the VC,  urging the government to include private university students.

    The former president expressed doubts about the government’s ability to implement the programme with total transparency.

    Ojediran commended private universities and stressed the need to include them in government initiatives.

    He chided the exclusion of private universities from the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) and the exclusion of private university students from the Student Loan Scheme.

    Read Also: NANS hails Tinubu for approving student loan scheme

    According to him, the decisions were not in tune with the current realities of the society and expectations of people.

    The VC said parents are struggling to keep their children enrolled in schools, whether public or private, due to the economic situation of the country.

     Ojediran sought the recognition of private universities as partners in progress with the government, adding that their graduates play a pivotal role in driving the country’s economy forward.

  • Succour at last with student loan take-off

    Succour at last with student loan take-off

    The amendment bill on the Student Loan sent by the President to the National Assembly was rushed through first and second reading on the same day last week and was passed by both chambers, paving the way for the smooth take-off of the scheme, TONY AKOWE reports

    The Student Loan (Access to Higher Education) Act 2023 sponsored by former Speaker of the House of Representatives and now Chief of Staff to the President was signed into law by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu  on 12 June, 2023. The law was to make available to  students interest-free loan to finance their education. Shortly after the signing of the law, several anomalies that needed to be addressed before the commencement of the scheme were identified by stakeholders in the education sector. Criticism of the bill led to the constitution of a technical committee made up of officials of the Federal Ministry of Education, the Central Bank of Nigeria and other stakeholders. The Nation had reported that the technical committee had drafted an amendment to the act which was to be submitted to the National Assembly as an Executive bill. Even though the President assured that the scheme would start in January 2024, it was evident that some of the challenges the students are likely to face must first be addressed.

    In his letter to the National Assembly seeking amendment to the act, the President said: “Pursuant to Section 58(2) of the Constitution of The Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended). I forward, herewith, The Student Loan (Access to Higher Education) (Repeal and Re-Enactment) Bill, 2024 for the kind consideration of the House of Representatives. The Student Loan (Access to Higher Education) (Repeal and Re- Enactment) Bill, 2024 seeks to enhance the implementation of the Higher Education Student Loan Scheme by addressing challenges related to the management structure of the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELF), applicant eligibility requirements, loan purpose, funding sources and disbursement and repayment procedures.”

     Some of the challenges identified as possible obstacles to the implementation of the fund which the amendments set out to address include the governance and management of the fund. For example, the act imposes the responsibility of managing the fund on the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria,  who is expected to appoint the Secretary to the fund and many see this as operating outside the core mandate of the CBN. In justifying amending the act, the government said  the act does not adequately provide for responsibility and accountability for the fund’s day-to-day management.

    The Nation had reported that if the scheme comes into effect without addressing the eligibility criteria, the purpose of the loan would have been defeated as many Nigerian students will not be able to apply and access the loan. In support of the argument, the government told the  National Assembly that “under the current legislation, students can only apply for loans to pay tuition fees. Federal tertiary institutions don’t charge tuition fees. However, students must pay other institutional charges. Under the current act, students would not be able to apply to the fund for loans to cover those other institutional charges or other upkeep costs, thus defeating the purpose of the loan, which is to ease access to tertiary education for young Nigerians.”

    The new Bill establishes a board to oversee the management of the scheme. Members of the board are to drawn from the relevant ministries, regulatory bodies, and participating agencies, including the Federal Ministries of Finance and Education, the Federal Inland Revenue Service, National Identity Management Commission, National Universities Commission, National Board of Technical Education  and National Commission of Colleges of Education  as well as representatives of universities, polytechnics, colleges of education, students and the organised private sector. In addition, a management committee is to be put in place to be headed by a Managing Director and Executive Directors responsible for the management and operations of the fund. Unlike the principal act which gives the CBN Governor power of appointing those to manage the scheme, the new law will bestow such powers on the President, while also properly defining its  resource structure.

     It seeks to establish a General Reserve Fund – into which shall be paid one per cent of all taxes, levies and duties collected by the Federal Inland Revenue Service and accruing to the benefit of the Federal Government . However, one question that was not addressed is whether state governments would be expected to contribute to the fund. It has also not addressed the issue of whether students of state-owned institutions and private institutions would be eligible to benefit from the scheme. It has also not addressed how much a student can apply for and how many times they can do that. It rather provided a blanket instruction:  “to provide loans to qualified Nigerians for tuition, fees, charges, and upkeep during their studies in approved tertiary education institutions and vocational and skills acquisition institutions in Nigeria.”

    The amendment effected a lot of changes to the eligibility criteria one of which is the removal of the family income threshold. This, according to the government, is to allow  students apply for the loan and accept responsibility for repayment according to the Fund’s guidelines. Also, the requirement of a level 12 officer or a lawyer of 10 years standing is to be removed to allow the students can apply for and receive loan subject to application and identity verification guidelines as provided by the fund. In addition, applicant will no longer be disqualified based on their parent’s loan history.

    But students will stand disqualified if there is evidence that such a student is a beneficiary of any education loan or scholarship scheme from the state and Federal Government or from any of its agencies. They can also lose benefiting from the loan if found guilty of misconduct such as plagiarism, examination malpractice, cultism, use of hard drugs and violence as well as defaulting in any previous students loan.

    Unlike the principal act which states categorically that the loan be used for tuition, the amendment will allow  students apply for loan to cover tuition and other fees payable to the school and maintenance allowance payable to the student. They are expected to start repayment of the loan as soon as the beneficiary becomes employed in any capacity or start making money, while the fund is not expected to initiate loan recovery efforts until two years after the completion of the National Youth Service programme by the beneficiary. However, unlike in the principal act, beneficiary can request an extension of enforcement action by the Fund by providing a sworn affidavit indicating that he is not employed in any capacity and is not receiving any income. It, however, warned that any person who provides a false statement to the Fund under this section is guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for three years, while the scheme makes provision for loan forgiveness in the event of death or any act causing inability to repay.

    Senate President, Godswill Akpabio said for the scheme to succeed,the amendment was imperative.

    He said: “This act now a Bill before us is to clean up whatever lapses found in the principal act and it is to the credit of Bola Ahmed Tinubu that he is the one that signed the students loan bill into law and he has asked us to repeal and re-enact another one that will be in line with the vision. This is to strengthen implementation, ensure sustainability of this programme. But it must not be lost on us that a lot of children have been lured into criminality as a result of lack of support. With provisions like this, I believe that lawmakers will collate would-be recipients from their constituencies and forward them to the appropriate authority so that they can obtain quality education.”

    Other lawmakers spoke on the significance of the amendment.

    House Leader, Julius Ihonbvere,  said the provisions of the Bill is as a result of the proactive spirit of the President to address the biting and high cost of higher education. He stated that he as a student, was a beneficiary of student loans and it made his educational pursuits easier.

    Read Also: Reworked Student Loan Law ready for Tinubu’s assent

    He stressed the importance of the Bill in ensuring higher education, vocational training as well as skills acquisition for  students. He sought members  support for the educational development for all Nigerians seeking higher education.

    Teerser Ugboh,  who led an adhoc committee to investigate obstacles before the implementation of the scheme, hailed the amendment being sought, describing it as a veritable tool for the development of the higher education system. He praised the provisions of the Bill for ensuring the children of people with lean means or self-sponsored students get the opportunity for  proper higher education.

    In his contribution, Inuwa Garba, thanked Tinubu for  considering the amendment to the act which he said had direct impact and would ensure  students get qualitative education.

     Minority Leader of the House, Kingsley Chinda,  said the Bill represented what youths have been clamouring for. He stated that the existing Higher Education Act has not been able to take off due to some procedural challenges. He added that the challenges would be addressed speedily.

     Philip Agbese  called for mechanisms to be put in place to ensure that no region of the country is left out.

     The Bill was voted on, approved for second reading and referred to the House Committee on Student Loans for Higher Education and Colleges.Just like in the House, it passed second reading in the Senate swiftly with senators supporting its amendment.

    Senator Victor Ume  said providing access to funding for the education of  youths was  very critical. He said most of the pressure received from  young people centred around the need for them to get proper education,  but funding remained a barrier.

    He said: “Most times, we are overburdened to create funds to support these young children.

     I have been running an education support programme and I know the pressure I receive from the young people. This is a very novel thing to do. It is done everywhere around the world. In America and the UK, students get access to loans to fund access to education and research. When they graduate, they start paying back when they are employed. If we can do that in Nigeria and run it efficiently, we will be contributing towards enhancing the skills and educational development of our young generation. Based on that, I support wholeheartedly that this bill be given expeditious passage.”

    While Sen. Ekong Sampson said the amendment was timely and will address a number of concerns of the youths, Sen. Anthony Ani  said the major problem in this country has always been availability of funds and that is why some persons are out of school. He said the scheme should provide a very good platform for people who wouldn’t have had the opportunity of gaining higher education to do that.

     Deputy Senate President, Barau Jibrin, Senators Abba Moro, Peter Oyeka,  Neda Imasuen, Solomon Olamilekan, Sadiq Umar and Sani Musa  also spoke in favour of the Bill saying it will give access to indigent students to get education.

    They noted that it demonstrated the President’s passion to develop education in the country.

  • Student Loan Bill: Tinubu passionate about education, says minister

    Student Loan Bill: Tinubu passionate about education, says minister

    • NANS seeks inclusion of grants for Nigerian students
    • Akpabio: our legislative agenda will enhance standard of living

    The Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman, has said President Bola Tinubu does not want any child of school age to be out of school.

    The minister stressed that the President is passionate about the education sector and remains focused on giving Nigerian children standard education.

    Tahir spoke as Senate President Godswill Akpabio promised that the legislative agenda of the 10th National Assembly would bring about tremendous improvement in the standard of living of Nigerians.

    The minister and the Senate President bared their minds during a public hearing organised by the Senate Committee on Tertiary Institutions and TETFund and the House of Representatives Committee on Students Loan, Scholarship and Higher Education Financing.

    The public hearing was held to get inputs on Student Loan (Access to Higher Education), Repeal and Reenactment Bill 2024, yesterday at the Senate in Abuja.

    Represented by Deputy Senate President Barau Jibrin, the Senate President said the scheme would address the problems of lack of funding among Nigerian students.

    Read Also: Student Loan Bill: Tinubu passionate about education, says minister

    “The present 10th National Assembly, at its inception in 2023, set out for itself a legislative agenda whose implementation would surely bring about a tremendous improvement in the living conditions/standards of the citizenry with Mr. President’s Renewed Hope Agenda,” he said.

    In amending the Bill, Akpabio said the opinions of all stakeholders would be considered to have a flawless legislation.

    “I wish to urge you to freely express your views and opinions, either for or against the subject of this hearing, in a manner that will bring about the sustenance of our collective will to be together as a nation to call ours.

    “Public hearings are one of the primary legislative processes that offer the general public and especially relevant stakeholders the opportunity to contribute their quota to law-making,” he said.

    The Chairman of the Senate Committee on Tertiary Institutions and TETFund, Muntari Dandutse, said access to quality higher education was a pressing concern for many Nigerian students.

    Also yesterday, the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) called for the provision of study grants for Nigerian students in the Bill seeking to establish the Nigeria Education Loan Fund (Nelfund).

    NANS President Lucky Emonele hailed President Tinubu for including the association’s leadership as representatives of the students on the loans board.

  • Federal Govt eases access to student loan in new proposal

    Federal Govt eases access to student loan in new proposal

    • Guarantor’s, parent’s debt, other hurdles cleared
    • False information is felony
    • Bill scales second reading

    Highlights

    • One per cent of collectable taxes to fund programme
    • Establishment of the Nigeria Education Loan Fund
    • Loan available for tuition, upkeep
    • Removal of family income threshold condition
    • False declaration attracts 3yrs in jail
    • Loan repayment forgiveness in case of death of beneficiary

    A major rejig of the student loan scheme of the Federal Government has been proposed for legislation by the National Assembly.

    The new plan will ease loan access by students.

    It was sent yesterday as an Executive Bill to the Senate and the House of Representatives for consideration and passage.

    Yesterday would have been the official kick-off of the programme, but it was shifted indefinitely.

    The new Bill seeks to scrap the Student Loan Act, which is to be substituted.

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on June 12, 2023, signed into law the Student Loan Bill to provide interest-free loans to Nigerians seeking higher education.

    It was sponsored by former House of Representatives Speaker Femi Gbajabiamila, now Chief of Staff to the President.

    It was introduced in 2016 as part of measures to address the funding gaps in tertiary education.

    The new Bill got expeditious consideration at the two chambers.

    It spells out the funding structure and other conditions attached to the loan.

    The Bill, which scaled the first and second reading on Day 1, proposes one per cent of all collectable revenue by the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) to fund the scheme.

    The hurdles of a guarantor, a parent’s debt profile and others in the old Act have been removed in the new Bill, thereby making it easier for the loan to be accessed.

    The Senate and House received from the President a bill which seeks to amend the Students Loan (Access to Higher Education) Act, 2023.

    The President’s letter was read by Senate President Godswill Akpabio and Speaker Tajudeen Abass.

    The letter is titled: “Transmission of Students Loans (Access to Higher Education) (Repeal and Reenactment) Bill 2024” and is dated March 14, 2024.

    It reads: “Pursuant to Section 58(2) of the Constitution of The Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended), I forward, herewith, the Student Loan (Access to Higher Education) (Repeal and Re-Enactment) Bill, 2024 for the kind consideration of the House of Representatives.

    “The Student Loan (Access to Higher Education) (Repeal and Re-Enactment) Bill, 2024 seeks to enhance the implementation of the Higher Education Student Loan Scheme by addressing challenges related to the management structure of the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELF), applicant eligibility requirements, loan purpose, funding sources and disbursement and repayment procedures.”

    The President said he hoped the bill would “receive the usual expeditious consideration of the” lawmakers.

    Both chambers suspended their relevant rules and passed the Bill for first reading.

    They, thereafter, referred the Bill to the Committee of the Whole where they separately considered and passed it for Second Reading.

    The proposal is entitled: “A Bill for an Act to Repeal the Students Loans (Access to Higher Education) Act, 2023 and Enact the Student Loans (Access to Higher Education) Bill, 2024 to Establish the Nigerian Education Loan Fund as a Body Corporate to Receive, Manage and Invest Funds to Provide Loans to Nigerians for Higher Education, Vocational Training and Skills Acquisition and for Related Matters”.

    All the lawmakers who contributed to the debate on the Bill in both chambers agreed that it should be passed as quickly as possible to boost education access.

    A significant amendment being sought, according to a policy brief, includes “the establishment of the Nigeria Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) as a body corporate that can sue and be sued in its name and has the power to acquire, hold, and dispose of movable and immovable property for the purpose of its functions”.

    On eligibility criteria for applicants, the new Bill removes the family income threshold to enable Nigerian students to apply for loans and accept responsibility for repayment according to the Fund’s guidelines.

    It also removes the guarantor requirement so that students can apply for and receive loans subject to application and identity verification guidelines as provided by the Fund.

    Student applicants can no longer be disqualified based on their parent’s loan history.

    The Bill establishes a justice and fairness provision mandating the Board to ensure a minimum national spread of loans approved and disbursed in each financial year.

    Applicants to the Fund may apply for loans to cover tuition and other fees payable to the school and maintenance allowance payable to the student.

    On repayment of loans, the Bill indicates that beneficiaries of the Fund shall begin as soon as the beneficiary becomes employed in any capacity.

    According to the brief, the Fund shall not initiate loan recovery efforts until two years after the completion of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) programme.

    Read Also: Tinubu writes House, seeks repeal, re-enactment of Student Loan Bill

    It states that a beneficiary may request an extension of enforcement action by the Fund by providing an affidavit indicating that he is not employed in any capacity and is not receiving any income.

    It provides out that any person who provides a false statement to the Fund under this section is guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for three years.

    It makes provision for loan forgiveness in the event of death or acts of God causing inability to repay.

    The brief says: “NELFUND can legally enter contracts, including loan agreements and may also initiate action to ensure repayment by beneficiaries.

    “It also empowers the Fund to provide loans to qualified Nigerians for tuition, fees, charges, and upkeep during their studies in approved tertiary education institutions and vocational and skills acquisition institutions in Nigeria.

    “It empowers the Fund to build, operate, and maintain a diversified pool of funds to provide loans to qualified applicants and ensure access to higher education, vocational training, and skills acquisition.”

    “These changes will ensure that students can apply for and receive loans to cover tuition, institutional charges and some upkeep costs.

    “It also separates the governance functions from the management operations of the NELFUND by establishing a Board of Directors with a Chairman and Secretary.

    “The board’s members are drawn from the relevant ministries, regulatory bodies, and participating agencies, including the Federal Ministries of Finance and Education, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), National Identity Management Commission (NIMC), National Universities Commission (NUC), National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), and National Commission For Colleges of Education (NCCE), as well as representatives of universities, polytechnics, and colleges of education, students of tertiary institutions, and the organised private sector.

    “It also properly defines the resource structure of the Fund by, amongst other things, establishing the General Reserve Fund into which shall be paid one per cent of all taxes, levies and duties collected by the FIRS and accruing to the benefit of the Federal Government of Nigeria.”

  • Hurdles before Student loan plan

    Hurdles before Student loan plan

    The Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) has announced plans to kick-start the Student Loan Scheme. As part of efforts to ensure the workability of the Act governing the scheme, three months after the submission of the report on its amendments, the House is yet to consider and adopt it for implementation by the Executive. The only private member bill on the floor of the House tailored towards the amendment of the law is still at its first reading stage. This has raised concern, TONY AKOWE reports.

    The Student Loan Scheme is set to take off with the appropriation of about N100 billion in the 2024 budget by the Federal Government.

      Sponsored by the former Speaker of the House of Representatives and now Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, the Student Loan Act was signed into law by President Bola  Tinubu, who promised that the law would be reviewed to give it a more friendly approach.

    The review was to address areas of concern raised by Nigerians in other to make the loan accessible to a large population of Nigerians. When the issue of the students’ loan first broke following the enabling law by the President, Nigerians quickly went to town to point out the loopholes in the law that needed to be corrected immediately.

    Amendment yet to be effected

    In view of the opinions expressed by Nigerians, the President put in place a high-powered committee headed by his Chief of Staff to look into the law as well as planned operation of the scheme and make adequate recommendations for the implementation.

    The committee went to work and drew up a work plan. The Nation learnt that the legal team of the committee set up by the President drew up a draft amendment to the law. But that draft amendment, which should come to the National Assembly as an Executive Bill, is yet to be presented to the lawmakers.

    To ensure the workability of the scheme, the House of Representatives set up an ad hoc committee to interact with stakeholders in the education sector, including the technical committee set up by the President and organise an education summit on the way forward. The committee headed by Terseer Ughor, representing Kwande/Ushungo Federal Constituency of Benue State, submitted a comprehensive report to the House on  October 10, 2023.

    But three months after the submission of the report, the House is yet to consider and adopt it for implementation by the Executive. However, The Nation learnt that even though the law requires comprehensive amendment, there is only one private member bill on the floor of the House tailored toward the amendment of the law. It could not be ascertained the content of the bill, which is still at its first reading stage.

    NELFUND is born

    The government has, however, put in place an agency known as the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) to manage the scheme. The agency is expected to handle all loan requests, grants, disbursement and recovery of the loans provided. Source of funding for the scheme include: one per cent of all profits accruing to the Federal Government from oil and other minerals; one per cent of taxes, levies and duties accruing to the Federal Government from the Federal Inland Revenue Service, Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) and Nigerian Customs Service (NCS); education bonds and education endowment fund schemes. It will draw funds from donations, gifts, grants, endowment and revenue accruing to the fund from any other source, according to the Act.

    ASUU’s opposition

    But, the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) is opposed to the loan scheme, saying poor and indigent students will not benefit from the scheme.The union believes that the conditions attached to the loan were not for the children of the poor, who were supposed to be the target beneficiaries. The union is also concerned about accessibility of the loan. While the government appears to have addressed the issue of accessibility, creating a loan app through which students can  have access, it is  yet to address other concerns such as the issue of guarantor and the qualification for students to apply for the loan as contained in the Act setting up the scheme.

    Ugbor told an online newspaper dedicated to legislative reporting that he expects ASUU to be a partner in progress in the implementation of the scheme, but regretted that the union is rather opposed to it. He said: “Change is constant and I think ASUU is used to doing things the same way and they are averse to change because they think that change will not be in their interest as members of ASUU. At the legislative summit we held, ASUU was the only organisation and the only stakeholder that came to that event and proposed that the government should not implement the students loan scheme in the country. ASUU recommended at the summit that the whole idea of students loan should be completely shelved and government should go back to the grants and scholarship system that has not worked over the years. ASUU should be coming up with recommendations and more intelligent strategies for developing the education sector, not taking us back to the years when they, as lecturers, have contributed grossly and greatly to causing the deterioration of the education sector.”

    Number of students expected to participate

    On the number of students expected to participate in the exercise and the amount for each student, he said: “From our last figures, we have at least 10 million students across tertiary institutions in the country. The National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) is the biggest tertiary institution in the country. I hear that they have over 500,000 students and then all the private universities and public universities combined also have a few millions. Polytechnics, colleges of education, and other institutions of higher learning are also there. By the time we put all those figures together, I am sure we will be getting a number that will rise above 10 million students in the country. So, if we are talking about an average of N1 million per student for a four-year study and you are talking about 10 million students that is about N1 trillion.  So, if we assume that 50 per cent of students may need student loans, based on the level of our development and poverty in the country, then we are looking at five million students requiring students loan.

    Read Also: Tinubu directs expansion of student loans programme

    Concern over source of funding

    One concern that was also raised was the source of funding for the scheme. However, the Federal Government said that part of the funds will come from proceeds from the Education Tax being managed by the Federal Inland Revenue Service.

    Chairman of FIRS Zacch Adedeji, who disclosed this, said: “The education tax fund is one of the sources of funding that we will use to execute this programme.” He believed that channeling the education tax into the scheme was the administration’s way of being accountable to Nigerian taxpayers.

    Currently, funds from the education tax are used by Tertiary Education Fund for the development of infrastructure in public tertiary institutions across the country. Adedeji said: “This is in fulfillment of Mr. President’s promise that we will make education accessible to all. This is one of the schemes where we will be applying the education tax that we collect. It is a way of being accountable to the taxpayers because the essence of education tax is to consolidate and restore education integrity and quality. In fulfilling that part of the Act, education tax fund is one of the sources of funding that we will use to execute this programme.”

    Modalities for accessing the loan

    Executive Secretary of NELFUND Akintunde Sawyerr outlined the modalities for accessing the loan. According to him, students wishing to obtain the loan will be expected to route their requests through the loan app or website. He said the app was designed to minimise human involvement in the process. Such students will be required to provide their JAMB registration number, date of birth, National Identification Number and Biometric Verification Number, among others.

    He said: “The applicant will go on to a portal, or they will engage with the app. They will have to put in certain pieces of information that make them eligible, such as their JAMB number and, of course, the tie-in to their date of birth. Further pieces of information include their NIN, which confirms that they are Nigerians. This loan scheme is being paid for by Nigerian taxpayers. So, it’s for Nigerians and the NIN to help verify and qualify them as such. Their BVNs is for financial inclusion because this scheme in itself will, at some point, be able to empower students. So, we need to know they have bank accounts. We need to know where their accounts are to be able to access those accounts. It will also have their matric number and admission number so that we can firmly establish which institution they are going to because one of the key elements of this is that once we have received applications and those applications are approved, the fees or the tuition requirements in terms of financials will be transferred directly to the institution. That in itself, has benefits for the institution”.

    The executive secretary said the government was keen to ensure that young Nigerians do not fail to acquire tertiary education simply because they lack the funds.

    He believed that the loan would help to stem the dangerous journey undertaken  by Nigerian youths across the Sahel to Europe in search of a better life. According to him, “Some of the opportunities provided by the scheme include enrolling intending students in teacher training programmes and vocational skills. The programme provides opportunities for Nigerian students who want to go into the academic and get a university degree or perhaps want the technical side and acquire some vocational skills and also in the teacher training space. This intervention will affect the lives of many Nigerian youths because that’s usually the bracket to further their education. It will enable us to intervene and support families, particularly the needy”.

    President Tinubu, who has directed the implementation of the scheme, has also directed that it be expanded to include those who might not want to enter higher institutions, by seeking to acquire some skills. The President’s spokesman, Ajuri Ngelale, said the President has directed the management of the NELFUND to expand its focus area by extending the interest-free loans to Nigerian students interested in skill-development programmes. He said the President believes that it is important for the scheme to accommodate those who may not want to pursue university education, noting that skill acquisition is as important as obtaining undergraduate and graduate academic qualifications.

    President Tinubu “emphasised the need for equity and inclusivity in the management of the programme, stating that no matter how economically challenged you are, accredited and qualified students will and must have access to this loan to advance their education in higher institutions. There is no compromise in our commitment to the disadvantaged citizens of this nation”.

    But, to achieve the required equity and inclusivity in the management of the programme, stakeholders believe the amendments should be effected urgently.

  • JUST IN: Student loans will be devoid of man-know-man, free and fair – Sawyerr

    JUST IN: Student loans will be devoid of man-know-man, free and fair – Sawyerr

    The federal government, on Monday, January 22, assured that the soon-to-take-off Student Loan Scheme would be devoid of human intervention as every action would be taken on an application, specifically designed for the purpose.

    This assurance was given by the Executive Secretary and Chief Executive Officer of the Students Loan Board, Akintunde Sawyerr, who spoke, along with the chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Zacch Adedeji, to journalists at the State House, Abuja, after a briefing meeting with President Bola Tinubu.

    He explained that the government was keen to ensure that young Nigerians do not fail to acquire tertiary education just because of a lack of funds to continue their studies.

    According to him, the implementation of the student loans scheme would enable Nigerians to pick a career trajectory of their choice, rather than being forced to do something else because they were unable to acquire the requisite education due to lack of funds.

    Sawyer also affirmed that the loan would help to stem the dangerous journey undertaken by Nigerian youth across the Sahel to Europe in search of a better life.

    Read Also: Student loan, tuition payment platform launched

    Sweyerr disclosed that the school fees for successful applicants would be transferred directly to their institutions, noting that while every Nigerian was eligible to apply for the loan, only the neediest would be supported.

    Also speaking during the briefing, the Chairman of FIRS, Dr Adedeji, said the Education Tax is going to be one of the funding sources of the student loans scheme.

    He said the deployment of the education tax fund into the scheme is one way the government can be accountable to taxpayers in the country.

    Details shortly…

  • Student loan, tuition payment platform launched

    Student loan, tuition payment platform launched

    AfriCred, a Fintech company, is partnering leading financial institutions in Africa and around the world to help students and guardians access credit for their studies.

    It offers short and long-term loans through financial institutions, instant tuition fee payment and living expenses travel credit cards, empowering students to take control of their higher education finances.

    The firm streamlines the loan process by providing a wide selection of leading global and Africa-based lenders at competitive rates, delivered with the best customer support. It has established exclusive partnerships with over 35 global universities across USA, Canada, Malta, European Union to offer on-click tuition payment experience.

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    Chief Executive Officer of AfriCred, Siddharth Maheshwari said its mission is to empower students by offering convenient and affordable access to credit, through robust partnerships with global financial institutions that provide loans at competitive interest rates, without requiring a co-signer or collateral.

    “We aim to ensure that no deserving student faces financial constraints for local or global university admissions,” he added.

    Senior Manager, Jerry Opara, said the firm is partnering various study-abroad businesses and higher education consultants, supporting existing organisations to better serve their students.

    “We are super excited to partner with AfriCred to help our students in Nigeria and Kenya access higher education financing and fee payment and very happy with the feedback of the students. We look to strengthen the exclusive partnership,” said Chris Velasco of Edison College, Canada.

    Director at ProU Education, Dr Piyush Jain, said: “Credit is fundamentally broken in education, especially when crossing borders. We can finally support our study abroad aspirants with an entire financial suite of solutions from loans and proof of funds to remittance and travel cards.”

  • Clearing hurdles of student loan scheme

    Clearing hurdles of student loan scheme

    Due to the constraints in the Student Loan Act, experts and other stakeholders are hoping that the necessary amendments would be effected to reflect the reality before the January kick-off of the implementation. Tony Akowe writes

    It is no longer news that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has directed that the new Student Loan Act signed into law immediately he assumed office should take off fully by January 2024.

     The Student Loan Act is one of the first laws to be signed by President Tinubu few days after assuming office. The law is aimed at addressing financial constraints that hindered many students from gaining higher education and will provide interest-free loans to those in actual need. It is expected to have a significant impact on Nigeria’s educational system, and it could potentially extend to sectors like technology and finance.

        Question on effective implementation

     But the question being asked is what plans have been put in place to ensure effective implementation of the law. Incidentally, the students’ loan scheme falls within the campaign promises of the President. At one of his campaign trips, at the British Royal Institute in London, Tinubu promised to give student loans as part of efforts to develop the education sector and also build the youth capacity.

    But immediately the Act became law, it came under serious criticism as some of the provisions run contrary to the objective for which it was passed and signed. This led the House of Representatives to set up an ad hoc committee to investigate and make recommendations on what need to be done to make it work better.

    Appearing before the House of Representatives ad hoc committee in August, Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Education, David Adejoh, had assured that the scheme would kick off in the 2023/2024 academic session – October or December.

    He said:”The assurances I  give to you are based on what I see. First is that no academic session in Nigeria is starting before September. Remember because of the strike apart from private and some states universities, academic calendar has been moved back. So, what we are saying now is, it might not be a 100% catchment but the loan is going to start in the 2023/2024 Academic Session. It can be October; it can be November depending on the school. Between October and November, we still stand a good chance. Once the technical committee finishes and comes to the main committee, then we will revert to the National Assembly with the clean bill. I know we can start this loan in 2023/2024 Academic Session”.

        On possible amendment to the law

        The Nation gathered that following observations by the Nigerians on the Act, the Federal Government set up a technical committee made up of officials of the Ministry of Education, the Central Bank of Nigeria and other stakeholders to brainstorm and come up with possible amendment to the law to remove the encumbrances against its effective implementation. The President had in his part promised that such encumbrances will be removed to make it easy for the students to apply for it. The Director of Legal Services of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), who represents the apex bank in the technical committee, Kofo Alada, while speaking for the Technical Committee, said a supplementary budget was needed to make funds available for the take-off of the scheme, assuring that his team had set a target earlier than November. He said: “We are technical people working and the kind of process flow that we are looking at is something that Nigeria will be proud of. What I will request or recommend to this committee is that of the funding requirement of this project. This body (parliament) has the power to convene and say we want to give a supplementary budget for this particular project; it is within your power and for anybody. It is better to plan so it is better for us to plan”.

        Making the law reflect reality of average Nigerian

    The Student Loan Act provides access to education for more students through interest-free loans and financial flexibility it offers. Despite this, one major flaw of the act is that it does not reflect the reality of the average Nigerian. Ironically, most of the eligibility conditions disqualify the target population, poor Nigerians, from accessing the loan. First, the combined annual family income requirement of less than N500,000 means that only students from families earning less than N42,000 monthly can apply. Assuming a two-parent household and that both parents earn some form of income, each parent must earn less than N21,000 monthly for their children to qualify. This requirement sounds paradoxical in a country where the minimum wage is N30,000 — this implies that many families are technically not eligible to apply for the student loan.

     In addition, the need to provide two guarantors represents a disconnection between the target audience and the nature of the guarantors required. Low-income-earning households with less than N500,000 annual income are less likely to have a strong enough relationship with guarantors, who can put their careers on the line for them to access the loan. The probability of a lawyer with ten years post-call experience or a civil servant of the director cadre serving as guarantors for a poor student is, therefore, low. Moreover, this requirement could encourage guarantors to demand hefty fees from poor students, fuelling cash-for-guarantor rackets.

    Hon. Terseer Ugbor, who headed the ad hoc committee, was not happy about the source of funding for the scheme, especially when only the Federal Government was meant to provide the revenue. The argument is whether the students from state-owned institutions can benefit from the loan since state governments are not part of the contributors to the funds. The argument also is whether the 1% to be drawn from taxes accruing to the FIRS, Immigration, Customs and profit from petroleum products and other solid minerals would be enough.

    He said: “We hope the system you are creating will be robust enough to take account of students who are already in school who want the loan to cover for the one year or two years of their schooling or students who are coming through direct entry. It seems to us from this perspective that 1% of the Federal Government Revenue as stated in the Act would not be enough to cover students loans for a year given the hundreds of thousands of students that we have getting admission every year and those who are currently in school, who may wish to also apply for a loan to cover for other years of their schooling. I want to suggest that if there is the need to increase the requirement of 1% to 3%. Then propose that and we are ever willing to look at it.

     “It is something that is quite critical. This is the area that the Ministry of Education can also hold on for it to be jerk up to at least 3% of this revenue. Now, we are hearing the states or local governments may or may not permit that deduction. So, I think there may be constitutional amendment before that 1% may be drawn. So, if that is not done, the Federal Government can only draw from its own share of revenue, which means state universities may be excluded if the state governments do not agree to participate in funding this student loan from their allocation from the Federal Government

     Still awaiting the Nigerian Education Loan Fund

     Also, the Nigerian Education Loan Fund, which is supposed to be established under the law to drive the process, is yet to be constituted. The Fund is supposed to be managed and administered by various stakeholders led by the Central Bank of Nigeria and commercial banks, with the Governor of the Central Bank as Chairman. It is supposed to provide mechanisms for monitoring academic performance, ensuring timely loan repayment, and preventing fraudulent practices.

    Read Also: PHOTOS: Student loan scheme takes off in January 2024 – Tinubu

    The law allows every Nigerian student seeking admission to an institution of higher learning to apply for the loan provided they meet certain criteria. These criteria include securing admission for a prescribed course of study into a federal or state university, polytechnic, college of education or vocational school, income of the parents or guardian of the student must not be above N500, 000 as well as providing two guarantors that are either be a civil servant of at least level 12, a lawyer with, at least, 10 years of post-call experience, a Judicial officer or Justice of Peace.

    Even though the act states that there shall be no discrimination based on gender, religion, tribe, position or disability of any kind, there are arguments that if the law establishing the loan scheme is allowed to go into practice the way it currently is, several Nigerians will be denied access.

    This will not be the first attempt by Nigeria at implementation of a Student loan scheme, having tried and failed under the Yakubu Gowon regime when the student loan decree died naturally. After that, another attempt at students’ loan also failed as several students failed to pay back the loan. Available information states that many of the students supplied fake addresses, making it difficult to track them for repayment. The managers of the scheme had to resort to publishing names of such students in the newspapers.

    Commenting on the law, Prof. Ben Ugwoke of the University of Abuja said that the introduction of the loan scheme amounts to placing the cart before the horse. He said: “Sincerely, I think the introduction of the students’ loan scheme in Nigeria is like placing the cart before the horse. The scheme is supposed to be a revolving programme, which means students who benefited are expected to pay back the loan for the scheme to continue. The question any concerned person would ask is ‘where are the jobs for the graduates that would enable them to repay the loans for the purpose of continuity? I would rather have thought that the government would first find a way to stimulate the economy so as to be able to absorb graduates in gainful employment, whether formally or informally. To the extent of my explanation, I feel the student loan scheme of President Tinubu would go the way of the early one, which packed up in 2002 and nobody has been brought to book. Foremost, the economy should be stimulated to generate job opportunities for graduates.”

    Another educationist, Michael Sule said: “The scheme may not stand the test of time as many indigent students may not benefit in the long-run because as usual, it is likely to be hijacked by those in the system and politicians and at the end, the aim would be defeated. The aim is to introduce high tuition fees in the system. The scheme may not work and secondly, we do not have a transparent and corruption-free system in place to implement such a scheme”

     There is no doubt that the students’ loans scheme is practiced in several countries of the world, especially in some developed countries. However, despite employment opportunities for students in those climes, it has never been free of challenges, especially the issue of repayment because many end up not repaying. The issue of repayment has been one of the areas of serious concern. The current act requires beneficiaries to start repayment after two years of completion of their national youth service.

    Former United States President Barack Obama once said that he only completed the repayment of a student loan he collected before he became a senator.

  • BREAKING: Student loan scheme takes off in January 2024 – Tinubu

    BREAKING: Student loan scheme takes off in January 2024 – Tinubu

    President Bola Tinubu has assured that the era of industrial actions in the nation’s academic environment has come to an end as the administration’s Students Loans Scheme commences January next year.

    President Tinubu gave the assurance on Monday while speaking at the 29th edition of the annual Nigerian Economic Summit, anchored by the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), at the Transcorp Hilton, Abuja.

    Tinubu, who spoke extensively on his administration’s plans to stabilise the economy, with the collaboration of all stakeholders, especially the private sector, also noted the need to immediately initiate a sustainable credit scheme, which he said will aid an effective anti-corruption campaign.

    Read Also: Tonto Dikeh joins APC, dumps ADC

    He said: “By January 2024, the new Students Loan Programme must commence. To the future of our children and students we’re saying no more strikes.

    “There must be consumer credit, scheme will have to come to effect as soon as possible. I thank my team and my colleagues to build this programme, develop it now. We cannot talk about anti-corruption when you have to look for cash to buy a car, when there’s no mortgage for homeownership”, he said.

    Details shortly…