A powerful new Oxfam report has sounded the alarm over Kenya’s widening education crisis, revealing that 1.13 million school-age children are currently out of school—a figure driven by rising poverty, child labour, early marriages, teenage pregnancies and a crumbling public education system.
The report, “Kenya’s Inequality Crisis: The Great Economic Divide,” paints a sobering picture of a country where a child’s chances of finishing school depend almost entirely on the size of their parents’ income.
According to Oxfam, a child in wealthy Nairobi can expect an average 11.2 years of schooling, while a child born in Turkana gets just 5.4 years. The gap widens even further in secondary education.
A secondary school-age child from the poorest families has a 70% chance of being out of school, compared to just 30% among the richest households.
“Approximately 1.13 million children of primary school age are out of school,” the report states, warning that nearly half of all secondary school-age learners are not accessing school at the appropriate age.
Oxfam accuses the government of “chronic underfunding,” noting that the Free Primary Education capitation has remained at KSh1,420 per learner since 2003. After inflation, that amount is worth just KSh250 in 2024.
“Government spending per pupil is now equivalent to just 18% of what it was worth in 2003,” the report says, warning that the cost-of-living crisis has pushed more families to the brink, leaving thousands of children unable to afford even the hidden costs of schooling.
The crisis is compounded by a severe shortage of teachers. Kenya currently lacks 100,000 teachers, a gap that would cost KSh72.8 billion annually to fill.
Classrooms remain congested, overstretched or closed altogether in many marginalised counties, making learning nearly impossible — especially for first-generation learners.
In response to the collapse of public school quality, low-cost private schools have sprung up across the country. But Oxfam warns they are not the silver bullet many assume.
While elite private schools offer world-class facilities, qualified teachers and small class sizes, low-cost alternatives often provide sub-standard learning, rely on poorly paid teachers and remain inaccessible to the poorest families.
The report also flags the growing problem of illegal fees in public schools — charges for lockers, admission, exams and even toilets — placing additional pressure on low-income households.
Gender disparities remain sharp. At least one million girls miss school every month due to lack of sanitary pads, translating into two weeks of lost learning annually.
While wealthier families show no gender gap in attendance, boys from the poorest households are 30% more likely to attend secondary school than girls.
The inequality worsens at higher education. Only 1% of students from the poorest quintile make it to tertiary institutions, compared to 45% of their wealthiest counterparts.
This, Oxfam argues, means public spending on tertiary education largely benefits the rich, entrenching a cycle of privilege.
Beyond education, the report reveals staggering wealth inequality. Just 125 individuals hold more wealth than 42.6 million Kenyans — about 77% of the population.
These disparities trickle down directly into schooling outcomes, with the poorest children left to navigate overcrowded classrooms, teacher shortages, hunger and early responsibilities at home.
Oxfam is urging the government to:
Substantially increase education funding,
Recruit more teachers, especially in marginalised regions,
Address hidden school fees,
Scale up programs to keep girls in school,
Bridge the growing divide between public and private institutions.
The report concludes that without urgent reforms, Kenya risks entrenching a lost generation — children whose dreams are dimming not for lack of ability, but because opportunity has been priced out of reach.








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