Abstract:
Education in general and tertiary education in particular has been identified as a necessary
catalyst and indispensable tool for a nation's economic growth and development.
Notwithstanding, the university system in Nigeria is being faced with the challenge of
inadequate funding with an attendant increase in the enrolment size of the institutions, which
has witnessed gross inadequacy of educational infrastructures for up to date research and
learning. Thus, the study assessed institutional expenditure on undergraduate training in
Federal University of Technology Akure. Secondary data for the study were collected on
six of the nine schools (faculties) of the university that were purposively selected for the
study. Data collected covered a period of five years between 2011 and 2015. Descriptive
statistics technique such as tables, frequencies and means were used to highlight the sources
and level of funding available to Federal University of Technology, Akure while unit cost
of education model was adopted to determine the unit cost of university education in the
various faculties or schools. Independent samples T-test, an inferential statistics was used
to determine the degree and direction of relationships that exists among the variables of the
study and subsequent testing of hypothesis. The study found that foremost among the
identified constraints is the dwindling level of funding in relation to the purchasing power
of the country’s currency (Naira) and the yearly increase in level of enrolment at the
University. It was also revealed that government grant to the institution was consistently
23% to 34% lesser than the institutional cost per student except in 2013 when there was a
15% shortfall. The mean total grant per undergraduate student received by the institution
for the period under study was ₦150,968 while the mean institutional cost per undergraduate
student over the period was ₦204,997. The study concluded that despite increased
undergraduate enrolment between from 2011 to 2015, there was a huge shortfall in grant
received in relation to institutional cost per undergraduate student by the university. The
study however recommended that adequate budgetary allocation to education sector is
supposed to be in geometric progression in consonance with the UNESCO benchmark of
26% rather than retrogression or stagnation as currently being experienced. Also, efforts
must be directed towards performance-based funding mechanism in order to establish
healthy competition among Nigerian universities. In performance-based funding as an
output-driven approach to allocating funds to universities, emphasis should be placed on
agreed or consistent indicators or outcomes for evaluating universities in order to allocate
funds.