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Lessons unlearned: the hidden costs of SA’s public education
The Mercury
|September 29, 2025
IN SOUTH Africa, the bitter irony of education is that a certificate often signals neither mastery nor mobility. Each year, thousands of matriculants emerge from underfunded schools with qualifications that cannot secure them work or dignity.
The OECD reports that nearly 39% of young South Africans with secondary schooling remain unemployed, a reality that mocks the promise of liberation. Three decades ago, economist Thomas Sowell exposed the deceptions of American education: grade inflation, union dominance and ideological capture that prized access over competence. South Africa today represents an even harsher version of those illusions.
Our system, celebrated for mass access, hides a deeper truth: access without outcomes chains the poor more tightly than exclusion. What appears as misfortune is, on closer inspection, a careful orchestration of incentives and neglect. From apartheid’s deliberate miseducation to democratic South Africas emphasis on symbolic transformation, education has often been wielded as a political instrument rather than a liberator.
To interrogate this deception, we must look beyond statistics into the incentives, histories and philosophies that sustain mediocrity. Only then can education be reclaimed as a tool for emancipation, not dependency. South Africa's education system carries the legacies of two powerful forces: apartheid’s engineered underdevelopment and post-1994 initiatives that blurred the line between access and quality. Mergers of colleges, diluted standards and a pass threshold of 30% created a mirage of progress while leaving foundational skills unattended. The data is unforgiving.
The 2025 PIRLS results reveal that 81% of Grade 4 learners cannot read for meaning. Media Monitoring Africa reports that 96% of public schools are overcrowded, while teacher absenteeism hovers at 10-15%. World Bank data confirms a real-term decline in per-learner education spending. Tertiary outcomes mirror these failures: over 42% of secondary graduates remain unemployed and nearly half of university entrants drop out in their first year.
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