The world is facing a global education emergency due to the COVID 19 pandemic. According to our current knowledge, almost 10 million children could be permanently excluded from education by the end of the year. Girls are likely to be much worse affected than boys, with many forced into early marriage. As the impacts of the recession triggered by COVID-19 hits families, many children may be forced out of school and into labour markets.

Deep budget cuts to education and rising poverty caused by the COVID-19 pandemic could force at least 9.7 million children out of school forever by the end of this year, with millions more falling behind in learning, Save the Children warns in a new report launched today. Girls are likely to be much worse affected than boys, with many forced into early marriage. As the impacts of the recession triggered by COVID-19 hits families, many children may be forced out of school and into labour markets.

In its report, Save the Children is calling for governments and donors to respond to this global education emergency by urgently investing in education as schools begin to reopen after months of lockdown. The agency is also urging commercial creditors to suspend debt repayments by low-income countries – a move that could free up $14bn for investment in education.

“It would be unconscionable to allow resources that are so desperately needed to keep alive the hope that comes with education to be diverted into debt repayments,” said Inger Ashing, CEO of Save the Children. The agency calls for governments to use their budgets to ensure children have access to distance learning whilst lockdown measures remain; and to support children who have fallen behind.

The Save Our Education report reveals the devastating effects the COVID-19 outbreak is set to have on learning. In a mid-range budget scenario, the agency estimates that the recession will leave a shortfall of $77 billion in education spending in some of the poorest countries in the world over the next 18 months. In a worst-case scenario, under which governments shift resources from education to other COVID-19 response areas, that figure could climb to an astonishing $192 billion by the end of 2021.

The impending budget crunch comes after lockdown measures saw a peak of 1.6 billion children out of school, globally.

Around 10 million children may never return to school – this is an unprecedented education emergency and governments must urgently invest in learning. Instead we are at risk of unparalleled budget cuts which will see existing inequality explode between the rich and the poor, and between boys and girls. We know the poorest, most marginalised children who were already the furthest behind have suffered the greatest loss, with no access to distance learning - or any kind of education – for half an academic year.

Inger Ashing CEO of Save the Children

Before the outbreak, 258 million children and adolescents were already out of school. A Vulnerability Index in the report[ii] shows that in 12 countries, mainly in West and Central Africa but also including Yemen and Afghanistan, children are at extremely high risk of not returning to school after the lockdowns lift – especially girls.

In another 28 countries children are at moderate or high risk of not going back to school and of the longer-term effects of widening inequalities. In total, Save the Children estimates that some 9.7 million children could be forced out of school by the end of this year.

Currently, more than 1 billion children are out of school due to the global pandemic.

Three months ago, things were very good for me. I was enjoying school in grade six. When we were in school, we used to play with our friends and learn. The school also used to provide us with a meal every day. Now after this virus, I can’t go to school, and I can’t see my friends. I miss my school and my friends so much. It has been nearly three months since schools were closed and like many of the children here, I spend most of my time looking after the livestock and I sometimes help my mother with household chores like cleaning and cooking.

Aisha*, 15, from Ethiopia

Many of the top-12 countries in the report’s index already have high out of school rates and a sharp divide in school attendance along wealth and gender lines. These factors are likely to be exacerbated by school closures, with girls and children from poverty-stricken families being hardest hit.

Children in these countries are also caught in a vicious cycle of risk: they face greater risks of being forced into child labour and, adolescent girls are especially at risk of gender-based violence, child marriage and teenage pregnancy, which increases the longer they are out of school. The same risks directly impact their ability to return to school at all. Combined with the sharp decrease of education spending, the COVID-19 outbreak could be a cruel blow for millions of children.

In many countries, Save the Children has provided distance learning materials such as books and home learning kits to support learners during lockdown, working closely with governments and teachers to provide lessons and support through radio, television, phone, social media and messaging apps.

Despite the efforts of governments and organisations, some 500 million children had no access to distance learning, and many of the poorest children may not have literate parents who can help them. Having lost out on months of learning, many children will struggle to catch up, raising the likelihood of drop out.

Save the Children warns that school closures have meant much more than education loss for many children – taking away safe places where children can play with friends, have meals and access health services, including services for their mental health. Teachers are often front-line responders and protectors for children who might suffer from abuse at home. With school closures, these safeguards fall away.

If we allow this education crisis to unfold, the impact on children’s futures will be long lasting. The promise the world has made to ensure all children have access to a quality education by 2030, will be set back by years. Governments should be putting the interests of children before the claims of creditors. Whether they live in a refugee camp in Syria, a conflict zone in Yemen, a crammed urban area, or remote rural village: all children have a right to learn, to develop, to build a better future than their parents might have had. Education is the basis for that, and we can’t afford to let COVID-19 get in the way.

Inger Ashing CEO of Save the Children

Save the Children urges governments and donors to ensure that out-of-school children have access to distance learning, and to protection services. Those who return to school should be able to do so in a safe and inclusive way, with access to school meals and health services. Learning assessments and catch up classes must be adapted so that children can make up for their lost learning.

To ensure this happens, Save the Children is calling for an increased funding of education, with $35 billion to be made available by the World Bank. National governments must make education a priority by producing and implementing COVID-19 education responses and recovery plans to ensure the most marginalised children are able to continue learning.

We demand:
Icon Geldsack

that the World Bank is allocating $35 billion for education spending.

Icon Bildung

that governments make education a priority and ensure that the most disadvantaged children are not left behind.

Icon Dialog

that creditors grant the poorest countries a deferment of payment. This could free up $14 billion for investment in education.

Icon Lupe

Ensure that children have access to digital learning and protection during school closure Returning to school must be safe and inclusive, there must be access to school meals and health services, and children must have the opportunity to catch up on missed schoolwork.

How we help children during the Covid 19 pandemic:

Guatemala: Distribution of "lunch boxes" - Save the Children worked with the authorities to ensure that such important lunchtime meals continued during school closures. With the help of parent-teacher associations, 15-day rations are distributed to 300 schools. We prepared the distribution of food and the staff received training on safe food handling and specific corona prevention protocols.

Kosovo: distance learning for children with disabilities - Save the Children has provided education and hygiene packages for 100 children with disabilities in 20 primary schools in seven municipalities in Kosovo. The packages are equipped with toys, teaching materials and puzzles. These packages will continue to support children who no longer have access to school and help to implement the activities of the new inclusive distance learning platform.

Zambia and Liberia: Food distribution during closed schools - Save the Children is working with the Zambian government to adapt existing school feeding programmes, which are used during droughts and distribute food rations to households. Instructions have been developed to manage the distribution of food to ensure physical distance and safe distribution, with hand washing facilities and personal protective equipment being provided to food distributors. 214 schools with 41`000 children receive daily food rations. In Liberia, we distributed food to 47`620 households with children in primary school in four districts after schools closed in mid-March 2020.

Uganda: supporting young children via radio - In Uganda, we have produced a radio series entitled "Ready to Learn" with playful learning and basic reading and counting activities for three to six year olds to do with their parents or carers. The series will be translated for use in rural areas and refugee settlements and will include songs and messages to inform young children about the Corona pandemic. The radio programs are recorded with the children themselves to encourage others to participate.

Philippines: Support for hygiene measures - In the Philippines, Save the Children supports schools in reopening by providing hand washing facilities, hygiene consumables, cleaning and disinfection kits and information, education and communication materials. Children play an active role in promoting and monitoring safe behaviour. We provide similar supplies for schools in China and Vietnam.

Five creative ways we’re providing education: