Africa
NELFUND: Hope for Students or Another Policy Experiment? -By Deborah John
There is also the lingering fear of corruption. Nigeria’s public institutions have not always inspired confidence, and many citizens are skeptical that funds will reach the students who truly need them. If NELFUND becomes another avenue for favoritism or mismanagement, it will only deepen public distrust and undermine the very purpose of the scheme.
For millions of Nigerian students, the dream of higher education is increasingly colliding with a harsh economic reality. Tuition fees are rising, parents’ incomes are shrinking, and public universities are struggling to stay afloat. Into this uncertainty comes the Nigeria Education Loan Fund (NELFUND), a government-backed student loan scheme presented as a lifeline for those who can no longer afford the cost of schooling. But beyond the optimism surrounding its launch lies a familiar question Nigerians have learned to ask: is NELFUND a genuine solution, or just another policy experiment destined to disappoint?
At face value, NELFUND appears to address a real and urgent problem. Education, often described as the great equalizer, has become increasingly inaccessible to students from low- and middle-income families. Many bright young Nigerians either drop out of school or never gain admission simply because they cannot pay fees. By offering interest-free or low-interest loans to students in tertiary institutions, NELFUND promises to bridge this gap, ensuring that no student is denied education solely due to poverty. In theory, this is a progressive and commendable idea.
Supporters of the scheme argue that student loans are not new to the world. Countries such as the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia have long relied on structured loan systems to expand access to higher education. If properly implemented, NELFUND could reduce the financial burden on parents, lower dropout rates, and produce a more educated workforce capable of driving national development. For a country battling youth unemployment and underdevelopment, investing in education through such a mechanism seems logical.
However, optimism alone cannot erase Nigeria’s history of well-intentioned but poorly executed policies. From failed subsidy regimes to abandoned empowerment programmes, Nigerians have seen too many initiatives begin with fanfare and end in frustration. Critics worry that NELFUND may follow the same path if issues of transparency, accountability, and sustainability are not addressed from the outset. Who will manage the fund? How will beneficiaries be selected? And how will repayments be enforced in a country where graduate unemployment remains alarmingly high?
The issue of repayment is perhaps the most troubling. While loans may help students enter university, they could also saddle young graduates with debt in an economy that offers few job opportunities. Without a reliable system that links repayment to employment and income, NELFUND risks becoming either a burden on graduates or a financial black hole for the government. Education should empower young people, not trap them in a cycle of debt before their careers even begin.
There is also the lingering fear of corruption. Nigeria’s public institutions have not always inspired confidence, and many citizens are skeptical that funds will reach the students who truly need them. If NELFUND becomes another avenue for favoritism or mismanagement, it will only deepen public distrust and undermine the very purpose of the scheme.
So, is NELFUND a hope for students or another policy experiment? The answer lies not in the idea itself but in its execution. As a concept, NELFUND holds genuine promise. As a policy, it stands at a crossroads. With strong oversight, transparent processes, and realistic repayment structures, it could transform access to education in Nigeria. Without these safeguards, it risks becoming yet another reminder that good intentions are not enough.
For Nigerian students watching their dreams hang in the balance, NELFUND must be more than a political headline. It must work.
