Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 26 February 2026
📘 Source: The Citizen

The National Student Financial Aid Scheme (Nsfas) will receive R54.3 billion in the current financial year to help students from disadvantaged families, a decrease from R58 billion in the previous financial year. This was revealed in the National Treasury’s 2026 Budget Review document. The department noted: “The Budget Review is compiled using the latest available information from departmental and other sources.

Some of this information is unaudited or subject to revision.” The document was released on Wednesday after Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana’s delivery of the 2026 National Budget. For years, the high costs of universities have been a burden on many households in South Africa. Nsfas was established to alleviate this pressure; however, many students remain unfunded.

The Budget Review document detailed that the funding will go to thousands of students in universities and colleges. “Nsfas will spend R54.3 billion in 2026-27 to provide bursaries to enable 744 203 poor and academically deserving students to access universities and technical and vocational education and training colleges,” reads the document. Nsfas was established under the National Student Financial Aid Scheme Act (1999).

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The scheme is responsible for providing bursaries and loans to students, developing criteria and conditions for granting bursaries and loans to eligible students in consultation with the minister, raising funds, and recovering loans from debtors, among other responsibilities. While the minister did not mention the funding scheme in his speech on Wednesday, the budget review document shows that funding for unprivileged students will increase over the next financial year. In the following financial year, the scheme will receive R56.5 billion and in 2028-29, funding will increase to R57.9 billion. In recent years, the funding scheme has made headlines for all the wrong reasons: if it is not students’ tuition not being paid on time, it is students sleeping on the streets due to accommodation that has not been paid for.

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📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by The Citizen • February 26, 2026

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