dc.description.abstract |
The present study is concentrated on higher education budget, its allocation,
implementation, and utilization for human resource development (HRD) in
Bangladesh. The study also strives to discover the financial and nonfinancial
challenges of higher education budget for HRD and to find out the ways to
overcome those challenges. The core objective of the study is to analyze higher
education budget against local, regional, and global benchmarks. Utilization of
higher education budget is dependant variable, while session jam in higher
educational institutions, unemployment, and employment nature of higher
educated people are three major independent variables of the study. The study is
based on both secondary and primary sources of data. Secondary data has been
collected from different published sources and primary data has been collected
through responses of semi structured questionnaire form 557 alumnae of the
public universities who are in job required non-technical entry qualifications and
from 63 faculties of public universities in Bangladesh. Collected data has been
edited, coded and tabulated in a methodical way. Monetary value has been
converted into current value of money based on consumer price index (CPI) of
Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS). Descriptive statistics such as frequency,
mean, mode, standard deviation (SD), co-efficient of variation, range, minima,
maxima and inferential statistics such as ANOVA, sample mean t-test, Chisquare
test along with charts and diagrams have been used to analyze data and to
find out results. All the statistical analyses have been conducted with the help of
Microsoft Excel and SPSS 15 version.
Empirical results demonstrate that the trend of revenue budget allocation on
education and UGC grants to public university budget (percentage) in
Bangladesh have been decreasing gradually over the period. Public expenditure
of higher education as percentage of GDP and government expenditure have
been far below than the suggested norms of different Education Commissions in
Bangladesh since independence and also the practices of South Asian countries.
More discouraging is that the public universities in Bangladesh are spending a
notable amount from undisclosed or unidentified or unexplained sources, which
is a sheer violation of budget manual. This situation suggests lack of
transparency in budget execution. Another most revealing feature of public
university budget is that the major portion of the budget has been spent for
salaries and pension (about three fourths) where as only one-tenth for education
contingencies. Major part (about three fourth) of education contingencies
exhausted for exam related expenses and remaining part for education expenses
& students’ facilities as against a negligible amount of total budget has been
spent for research, fellowship and scholarship during the whole period of review.
Expenses on major sub-heads of education contingencies are significantly
dissimilar among different categories of universities.
Human resource development scenario in Bangladesh is also in a very poor
shape compare to other South Asian countries, least developed and developing
countries. There is a high positive correlation between national education
budget and HDI value of Bangladesh. The adult literacy rate of Bangladesh is
lower than the average of least developed countries and South Asian average,
not to talk of World average.
High unemployment rate is a reality in Bangladesh. A large part of higher
education budget has been unproductive mainly because of short-term and
long-term unemployment and Bangladesh has been deprived of getting the
services from those unemployed higher educated people. On the other hand
session jam has been creating extra financial pressure on the government and
on the guardians. Students are delayed to start their working life and
consequently, the country is deprived of getting the services from the graduates
for the period of session jam. Job nature has a pressure on utilization of budget.
Technical graduates usually consume 3 to 5 times more money than the general
graduates and as such about half of the government expense against any
technical graduate is an unproductive investment when s/he works in nontechnical
job.
Insufficient budget allocation is one of the main budgetary challenges for
higher education in Bangladesh. Similarly, inappropriate utilization of budget
due to session jam, unemployment and job nature of higher educated people is
also a major challenge for higher education budget. There are some other
challenges such as lack of appropriate plan and its proper implementation,
slavish national politics in higher educational institutions, importance of
political identity over merit while selecting as well as promoting academic and
nonacademic staff, assigning different charges to them, abuse of public
university autonomy, and also absence of quality research, etc. Unmatched
between expected and actual study area and or study discipline decreased the
interest of the students in higher education. Similarly, unmatched between
expected and present job is obstacle to utilized working ability of higher
educated employee fully. All these are indirect challenges of higher education
budget in Bangladesh. Higher education of Bangladesh is not standard enough
to meet the local and international standard. Consequently, unemployed higher
educated people are increasing gradually. To defeat all direct and indirect
challenges of budget for higher education, budgetary allocation should be
increased to a rational level and proper implementation of the same following
budget manual should be ensured. Special emphasis should be given on the
allocation for research, fellowship and scholarship and create an environment
for quality research. Some alternative sources of finance such as arranging loan
for students, strengthening relationship with scholarship providers, involving
professors in consultancy, research projects, research grant etc in addition to
government grant and tuition fees should be looked for by the public
universities in Bangladesh to alleviate extra pressure on their budget. |
en_US |