Why Does School Fees Still Feel Like an Emergency?

By Andrew Musanja

As a parent, I live by two calendars. The first is the one on my wall, with birthdays, work deadlines, and family events. The second lives in my head and never lets me rest. It is the school calendar. Term opening dates. Deadline reminders. The quiet countdown to the moment when a child might be sent home for unpaid fees.

In the weeks before schools reopen, many parents I know exist in a state of low-grade panic. WhatsApp messages fly. “How much are you short?” “Do you know anyone lending?” Salaries are checked and rechecked. Savings jars are broken. Some parents sell household items. Others postpone rent or medical visits. This is not rare or dramatic. It is routine.

School opening days tell the same story every term. Children reporting late. Others sent home. Parents standing awkwardly in school offices, promising to pay “by next week.” Borrowing from friends, savings groups, or worse, informal lenders charging punishing interest. All this for an expense reed.

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