The annual public complaints about the high cost of school supplies have been increasing since the arrest of a mother of two for stealing textbooks from a Port-of-Spain bookstore last week.
There has been very intense debate about the incident, with strong views being expressed about the financial burdens facing low-income families in T&T’s “free” public education system.
However, the back-to-school struggle is not limited to families at or below the poverty line. Some middle-income families are forced to take out loans to pay for textbooks because, with prices ranging from $150 to $300, the total cost to fill primary and secondary school book lists averages around $2,000 per child.
Add in the costs for stationery and uniforms, plus the miscellaneous fees imposed by most public schools, and a disturbing picture emerges about the increasing financial burden on families with members in the education.
Two reports in the Sunday Guardian focused on the matter. One was about the mother charged with stealing six textbooks valued at $2,150.65 and the other was about a single mother of four struggling to buy school supplies for three of her children who are entering Form Four, Standard Two and Second Year.
Those stories offer glimpses into the financial pressure on parents as they try to outfit their children for the upcoming new school year, with few alternatives to paying full price for brand-new textbooks and other school supplies.
Some parents try to resort to second-hand purchases because they can’t afford new books but are stymied by the frequent inclusion of new editions of textbooks on book lists.
The extent of the back-to-school financial struggle is well known and successive political administrations have come up with quick-fix solutions that barely scratch the surface of the issue.
Such was the case with Finance Minister Colm Imbert’s announcement in his 2023/24 budget presentation of a school supplies and book grant of $1,000 to benefit some 65,000 needy families.
That partial relief for parents in the lowest income brackets might not have been the best value for the taxpayers’ money.
Last year’s budgetary allocation for education of $8.02 billion seemed an impressive sum at first glance. However, the gaps exposed during the financial year, particularly in the funding of the operations of schools, suggest a review of education expenditure and management is needed.
For example, there are reports of parents being called on to make up for the shortfalls in the funding of schools through registration and other fees to cover security and other costs in taxpayer-funded public schools. This is an additional strain for those parents who can barely afford to send their children to school.
Consider also how the other gaps in the system — chronic shortages in the services and support that are supposed to be provided for free — have given rise to all kinds of private enterprises that make them available at a cost.
Different approaches are needed, including innovative but practical ways to lower the cost of textbooks and basic school supplies. That includes exploring all possible options for standardising textbooks to stop unnecessary new textbooks being added to the curriculum every year.
It is time to reverse the course and find ways to level the education playing field, providing opportunities for all children regardless of their family’s income level.