Gordon Brown, the UN Special Envoy for Global Education who also served as UK Prime Minister, was one of the signatories asking G20 heads, national Governments and global financial institutions to urgently ramp up funding to “rebuild education better”.
“We cannot stand by and allow these young people to be robbed of their education and a fair chance in life”, the letter stated.
The former leaders also warned that the world’s poorest children have not only been locked out of learning, often without internet access, but also denied critical school meals – once a lifeline for 300 million boys and girls – leading to rising hunger.
Repercussive threats
Citing World Bank estimates, they said that “over the next year overall education spending in low and middle-income countries could be $100-150 billion lower than previously planned”.
“At the very time we need extra resources, education funding is in danger on three fronts”, they added, pointing first to the repercussions of slower or negative growth, which undermines tax revenues, and ess money in almost every country for public services, including schooling.
Secondly, when allocating limited funds, Governments are prioritizing health and economic recovery expenditures, “leaving education crowded out and underfunded”, they continued.
And finally, the former leaders shone a light on intensifying fiscal pressure in developed countries, which will result in international development aid reductions.
“There is also a danger that multilateral donors, who already under-invest in education, will reallocate funds”, they stated.
Enabling catch-up
The signatories of the letter – which include former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon; Mary Robinson, former UN human rights chief and Irish president; Helen Clark, former UN Development Programme chief and Prime Minister of New Zealand; and Graca Machel, women’s advocate and former UN adviser – spelled out that the funding crisis “will not resolve itself”.
To work out these issues, the former leaders called on the G20, IMF, World Bank and regional development banks, “and all countries to recognize the scale of the crisis and support three emergency initiatives”.
They stated that every government should “pledge to protect front-line education spending” and prioritize the needs of the most disadvantaged children through cash transfers to promote school participation.
Next, the international community must “increase aid for education, focusing on the most vulnerable”, through debt relief: “We call for debt suspension with a requirement that the money for debt servicing be reallocated to education and other priority investments for children.”
They also called on the IMF to release a further $1.2 trillion from its global reserves for members to channel towards countries most in need.
“Now is the time for national governments and the international community to come together to give children and young people the opportunities they deserve and to which they are entitled.”