Jaegar PPT - 2011 USAID Global Workshop on Education and
Transcription
Jaegar PPT - 2011 USAID Global Workshop on Education and
Koperasi Siswa Bangsa an initiative from Putera Sampoerna Foundation 1 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential The Putera Sampoerna Foundation Dedicated to improving and increasing educational and economic opportunity, particularly for the underclasses and women, as a means of leading social reform to a more egalitarian, tolerant, progressive and globally engaged nation. Producing a new generation of leaders for Indonesia’s business, government and education sectors. 2 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential A glimpse into the current state of education • For most Indonesians educational tuition is highly unaffordable : 1. High school tuition : • Public : IDR 4 million per year • Private : IDR 40 million per year 2. University tuition : • Public : IDR 8 million per year • Private : IDR 65 million per year Sources : 1. Kementerian Pendidikan Nasional 2009 2. Badan Pusat Statistik 2009 3. Kemendiknas 2009 • Rate of higher education enrolment by high school graduates is 14.7% • 1.5 million teens drop out – 56.4% are due to economic reasons 3 3 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential The Putera Sampoerna Foundation 4 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Sampoerna Sponsored Students “The brightest of the Poorest” 5 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Dr. Walter McMahon Professor of Economics and Professor of Education Emeritus at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign and author of Higher Learning, Greater Good: The Private and Social Benefits of Higher Education, (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009), Winner, Best Book in Education, 2010 PROSE Award Professional Scholarly Publishing Division of the Association of American Publishers. In a league with Charles Clotfelter, Robert Lucas and Paul Romer. 6 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Key Findings The McMahon studies reviewed and analyzed data from around the world, including Indonesia, and found that for affecting income and other variables increasing the number of bachelor degrees in developing nations has the most rapid and statistically measurable affects in certain benefit areas across a society. The affects surpass the results of governmental interventions such as welfare and economic development. 7 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Benefits of Higher Education Private non-market benefits from Social Benefits from higher education higher education are also impacts on are benefits to others and to future nation-wide development. They include generations. They include: contributions to: • • • • • • • Better Health Better Child and Spousal Health Greater Longevity Child Education and Cognitive Development Fewer Children, Slower Population Growth More Efficient Household Management Happiness • • • • • • Democratization and Improving Civic Institutions Human Rights Political Stability Poverty Reduction Lower Crime Rates Environmental Sustainability 8 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Higher Education and GDP GDP/Capita GER - HEI $24,500$ 25,000 100% 91.0% 80% $ 20,000 60% $ 15,000 $12,800 42.7%$9,200 40% $ 10,000 32.5% $7,800 28.1% 20% 20.3% $5,000 $ 5,000 17.3% $3,900 Indonesia China The Philippines Malaysia Thailand South Korea Source: Dirjen Dikti 2007, CIA World Fact Book 2007 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential 9 Challenge: Enfranchise Higher Education No student loans available in Indonesia • Typical consumer loans 3-5 year term • No deferred repayment option • Must be collateralized Research by PSF • • • • Desirability by students and family Risk resistance Customer financial and demographic analysis Salary and repayment formula analysis 10 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Loan Program History • 2006-2009 Pilot Student Loan program w/ IFC – General public – limited screening – Broad number of HEI options Results: High number of low-non-performing loans • Siswa Bangsa Fund 2010 from Private Donations (USD 3 Million) 170 loans – – – – New eligibility and screening procedures Capitalized by PSF through Sahabat UKM – Microfinance Bank 3 years from graduation High retention of students • New Fund in 2011 – Capitalized by PSF, banks UBS and RZB and corporate/private social investments –USAID DCA guarantee facility (USD 5 Million) 11 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Loan System Modeling • • • • • • • • • • System must be Scalable and Sustainable Must manage eligibility in incoherent environment Develop non-traditional loan candidate selection criteria Exercise control and monitoring of academic activities to limit attrition Establish a peer and community bond - cooperative Flexibility in terms and amnesty Multiple collection mechanisms Grow and expand Resistant to corruption Uncollateralized 12 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Dana Siswa Bangsa Key Elements 1. Repayment pegged to percentage of actual income 2. Deferred repayments until employed 3. Objective to become self-sustaining - revolving fund – – – – – Limited eligibility and intensive screening 11-14 years financing term, with grace period No collateral required Optional monthly support is provided Loan can cover school fees / tuition and living expenses during schooling 13 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Eligibility and Screening Eligibility and Screening Process -- Intensive and Expensive •S3 High School graduation certificate with legal RoI academic report (grade 10 to 12) with minimum average marks of 7.00. •Acceptance letter in selected university and program •Social and economic review – lower quintile Documentation requirements: – – – – – – – – Completed and signed Application Packages Certified copy of academic record from grade 10 to grade 12 A copy of the last one month of home electricity bill (if the applicants own a house or live with parents) or a copy of house/ room rental payments A certified copy of Family Card (Kartu Keluarga) A copy of valid National ID card (KTP/Passport) A copy of parent’s/ guardian’s national ID card (KTP/ Passport) A copy of the last one month of parent’s salary slip 2 References Letters consisted of one recommendation form from High School Head Master and one Recommendation form from High School Teacher ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential 14 Selection Method Based on multiple criteria with multiple assessors to ensure its comprehensiveness and validity within incoherent environment 1.Round One – Application and materials review Candidates must complete all of the registration documents. Initial assessment of the values is based on the papers submitted that shows about their class rank, organization experience, achievement, social activity, reference, and a personal essay 2. Round two – Values and Resilience Qualified candidates will be invited to the second round of assessment consisting of: • Psychological review – Written essay – self description – Interview – Group discussion observed and assessed for social dynamics – Assess candidate’s views regarding social issues and general knowledge about Indonesian society – Assess candidates capacity to transcend traditional repressive social structures 15 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Selection Process and Screening Final Round •Financial Background Check in neighborhood or village •Integrity and character assessment •Credit Scoring - Sahabat UKM •SelectionTeam will conduct a random home visit to short listed candidates All loan recipients must join the cooperative: •Creates community of scholars and cohesion •Provides peer monitoring students •Offers counseling, support and advancement services •Becomes an “alumni association” for life with local and national activities 16 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Organic Organization and Management Multiple Interlocking Management Elements •The Putera Sampoerna Foundation – Funding and support systems •ACCESS Education Beyond – Academic screening and guidance •Koperasi Siswa Bangsa – – – – – Organizational management Loan candidate selection process Student oversight Community of members •Bank Sahabat UKM - PSF affiliated SME Bank regulated un ROI – Loan processing – Disbursements – Collections ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential 17 Dana Siswa Bangsa Model The Dana Siswa Bangsa cycle provides more opportunities for more students to access quality education Loan Donation University Allowance Repay Donor Students Contributions 2-5 years Working alumni ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential 18 18 Koperasi Siswa Bangsa community Builds Community of Scholars with a Mission - Leadership •Builds member connections with life-long continuity •Offers familiar structure of rites and rituals “tanggung renteng” •Value adding services • Job fairs • Internship contracts • Training and application center • Career coaching • Social functions and networks • Group Community Service Projects 19 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Potential & Career Development • Working together with partners and donors, Siswa Bangsa provides its beneficiaries with opportunities to enhance their skills so they can reach their full potential • The potential development programs include: – – – – Lawrence Quahe Student Camp • Sampoerna students in UK (British Council Competition) Leadership Social and environmental Entrepreneurship School exchange Students’ career enhancement program involves: – – – – Résumé-writing workshop Interview preparation Internships Job placement assistance 20 20 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Future Goals and Plans Current and projected loan activity –360 Current loans under management –600 Total projected next year –1000 in next 3 years –Increasing at 1000 per year into the future based on projections •Future Plans and Options –Increasing corporate and individual contributions –Invite “angel” or social investors to participate –Plan and test bond offering program Bond Guarantees from ADB, IFC, other parties (Institution Issuing Bonds) Consortium of banks or individual institution –Investors (i.e. pension funds, institutional investors) –Seek additional international capital via internation aid organizations – JICA etc. •Expand into middle class market 21 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Terima kasih dan saya sangat 1822 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential 23 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Thank You Terima kasih dan saya sangat best wishes 24 ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential International MBA Scholarship Program Schools Attended The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania Kellog School of Management, Northwestern University Stephen M. Ross School of Business, the University of Michigan Kelley School of Business, Indiana University Bloomington Melbourne Business School Anderson School of Management, University of California Los Angeles London Business School Harvard Business School, Harvard University Haas School of Business, the University of California at Berkeley Mays Business School, Texas A & M University Manchester Business School EM Lyon Business School Fuqua School of Business, Duke University NUS Business School, National University of Singapore Macquarie Graduate School of Management Krannert School of Management, Purdue University Fisher College of Business, the Ohio State University Columbia Business School, Columbia University MIT Sloan School of Management Kenan-Flagler Business School, the University of North Carolina HEC School of Management McCombs School of Business, University of Texas at Austin INSEAD ©2009. Putera Sampoerna Foundation. All right reserved. Proprietary and Confidential Scholar 3 2 4 2 6 1 3 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 25