With almost 70 million children of primary school age not in school - a figure set to rise by 2015 - urgent action is required, Gordon Brown said this week.
With almost 70 million children of primary school age not in school, a figure set to rise by 2015 and not fall to zero as promised in the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), urgent action is required, Gordon Brown said this week.
In his new report, “Delivering on the promise, building opportunity: the case for a Global Fund for Education” (pdf), the former prime minister offers a blueprint for the reform of key international institutions so they deliver more effective support for education in developing countries.
Part of the solution is more money. Brown’s report draws on UNESCO research showing the annual financing gap for achieving universal basic education is $13 billion (£8.3bn), compared to current aid levels of just $3bn (£1.9bn).
Not all of this would come from governments, however, with the report highlighting the recent creation of a Global Business Coalition for Education, and notes that US corporations currently give $8bn (£5bn) a year to global health causes but only $500m (£320m) to global education.
But the flagship recommendation is the creation of a new, independent Global Fund for Education. While the current major education fund, housed within the World Bank, has presided over an impressive fall in out-of-school numbers of 40 million over the past decade, progress has now stagnated or even gone into reverse.
This fund, recently renamed the Global Partnership for Education, has been unable to attract significant support from donors and has been criticised in some quarters for being slow and inflexible – and what is more, many countries with the largest numbers of out-of-school kids, including Afghanistan, Pakistan, India and Bangladesh, are not eligible for grants.
A new Global Fund for Education would attract funding from non-traditional sources, make grants to NGOs and private companies working in remote areas (and not only governments or international agencies), and finally deliver resources commensurate with the size of the global education challenge.
The health sector again provides a template, following the huge successes of GAVI and the Global Fund for HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria.
This report sees Brown at his best: forensically focused on policy detail and driven by a deep passion for improving the lives of the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people, and with Australian foreign minister Kevin Rudd publicly backing the idea, the proposals contained in the report may soon become reality.
See also:
• 100 years of the ANC, Africa’s oldest liberation movement – Tony Dykes, January 9th 2012
• Blair: “The money is just a way of funding the rest of the things I do” – Shamik Das, September 30th 2011
• Don’t listen to the sceptics – India’s poorest will die without our aid – Anas Sarwar MP, June 15th 2011
• Education for all: A global imperative – Natan Doron, May 20th 2011
• Meeting the Millennium Development Goals – can we do it? – Jim Dobbin MP, September 23rd 2010
18 Responses to “Brown’s blueprint for reform of global education may soon become reality”
coralyn canfor-dumas
RT @leftfootfwd: Brown’s blueprint for reform of global education may soon become reality http://t.co/MyOObPm8
neil watkins
Brown’s blueprint for reform of global education may soon become reality, reports @ShamikDas: http://t.co/SgR6y9az @SarahBrownUK
BevR
RT @leftfootfwd: Brown’s blueprint for reform of global http://t.co/0ThaR1Ql
EDUBEAT
Brown’s blueprint for reform of global education may soon become reality | Left Foot Forward http://t.co/vofWRXg1
Anonymous
It’s all about Trust and if Brown came down to me on bended knee’s i would not trust him simple, this is the bloke who attacked the sick and the disabled, then blamed the banking crises on everyone from welfare to Bush to Blair.
No thanks the best bet for this bloke is to stay silent