Study Reveals Financial Support Drives Higher Completion Rates Among Postgraduate Learners
The University of the Western Cape has released findings from a detailed examination of how financial aid shapes decisions and outcomes for students pursuing advanced degrees. Conducted by researchers in the Faculty of Economic and Management Sciences, the work tracks a 2019 cohort and demonstrates clear links between funding and improved completion rates, particularly at the postgraduate diploma level.
South Africa’s higher education system faces ongoing pressure to expand postgraduate enrolment in line with national development targets. The National Development Plan calls for more than 100 doctoral graduates per million people annually by 2030, yet support mechanisms remain concentrated at the undergraduate level through the National Student Financial Aid Scheme. Postgraduate programmes often rely on limited internal university funds, National Research Foundation grants, and sector-specific bursaries.
Methodology and the 2019 Cohort Profile
Researchers analysed records for 623 new postgraduate students who registered in the Economic and Management Sciences faculty during 2019, the final full academic year before pandemic disruptions. The group included 186 students in postgraduate diploma programmes, 275 in honours degrees, 133 in master’s programmes, and 29 pursuing doctorates.
Data captured demographic details, aid receipt status, funding sources, award amounts adjusted to 2025 December prices, and eventual academic outcomes. Only 45.8 percent of the cohort received any financial aid, a figure far below the near-universal coverage provided to undergraduates through national schemes.
Who Receives Support and From Which Sources
Receipt rates varied by qualification level. Postgraduate diploma students showed the highest proportion at 50.5 percent, while doctoral candidates recorded the lowest at 37.9 percent. University of the Western Cape internal awards accounted for the largest share of support at 35.8 percent, followed by National Research Foundation funding at 16.8 percent and Finance and Accounting Services Sector Education and Training Authority bursaries at 15.1 percent, the latter concentrated among accounting students.
Average award sizes reflected programme duration and intensity: approximately R55,000 for postgraduate diploma and honours students, R110,000 at master’s level, and R225,000 for doctoral candidates. The majority of recipients across all levels were Black African students, consistent with efforts to address historical disadvantage.
Measurable Gains in Completion and Timely Progress
The strongest effects appeared among postgraduate diploma students. Aid recipients achieved an 81 percent completion rate compared with 71 percent for non-recipients. Honours students showed a smaller but positive gap: 91 percent versus 89 percent.
Time to completion also improved. Postgraduate diploma recipients finished in an average of 1.51 years, while non-recipients required 1.94 years. Honours aid recipients averaged 1.33 years against 1.45 years for others. These patterns suggest funding reduces financial barriers that otherwise delay or derail progress.
Photo by Jolame Chirwa on Unsplash
Broader Labour Market Context in South Africa
Statistics South Africa labour force data underscore the economic rationale. Unemployment stands at roughly 35 percent for those holding only a matric certificate, falling to 12 percent for first-degree holders and just 5 percent for postgraduates. Average earnings for postgraduate qualifiers exceed those of bachelor’s degree holders by approximately 38 percent.
These differentials align with national priorities outlined in the White Paper for Post-School Education and Training, which emphasises expanded postgraduate opportunities to build research capacity and competitiveness.
Policy Implications for Institutions and Government
The findings point to an opportunity for expanded investment in postgraduate support. Current fiscal constraints make large-scale expansion challenging, yet targeted increases could yield returns in equity, throughput, and human capital development. Institutions may benefit from reviewing aid allocation to ensure postgraduate diploma and honours students receive adequate attention, as these qualifications often serve as gateways to further study.
Additional indicators such as mean completion time, throughput rates, staff doctoral qualifications, and availability of part-time options could help universities and the Department of Higher Education and Training assess progress toward skills needs.
Perspectives from University Leadership and Researchers
Professor Derek Yu, Deputy Dean for Academic Planning in the Faculty of Economic and Management Sciences and lead author, noted that financial aid functions both as an access tool and a success factor. Co-authors Shaun Pather, Rochelle Beukes, Christie Swanepoel, and Ronald Arendse contributed to the analysis published in the South African Journal of Higher Education.
The study reinforces UWC’s commitment to social justice and graduate employability, themes central to the institution’s strategic direction.
Challenges in Scaling Postgraduate Funding
Private sector contributions remain variable amid economic pressures, while public resources face competing demands. Many potential postgraduate students enter the workforce immediately after their first degree to support families, reducing the perceived value of further study without guaranteed financial backing.
Part-time study options help some learners balance work and academics, yet they can extend completion timelines. Expanding flexible funding models could address these realities.
Photo by Jolame Chirwa on Unsplash
Future Outlook for South African Higher Education
As universities prepare for the 2027 academic cycle, the UWC research offers evidence-based guidance for resource allocation. Greater alignment between undergraduate support mechanisms and postgraduate needs could strengthen the pipeline from first degrees to advanced qualifications.
International comparisons and ongoing monitoring by bodies such as the Council on Higher Education will help track whether increased investment translates into higher doctoral output and improved research productivity across the sector.
Practical Steps for Prospective Students and Administrators
Students considering postgraduate study at UWC or similar institutions should explore internal bursaries, National Research Foundation opportunities, and sector education and training authority awards early in the application process. Administrators may review aid distribution data to identify gaps at diploma and honours levels.
Partnerships between universities, government, and industry could pilot expanded funding pilots that measure both access and completion metrics over multiple cohorts.
