As inflation persists and supply chain issues continue to arise across multiple sectors, it comes as no surprise that on average, countries observed can expect costs to rise.
The total cost per child for school supplies impact on families has been estimated at Ksh.68,701 in Kenya, according to WorldRemit.
Given the average household size in Kenya of 3.23, the total cost per household is estimated at Ksh.221,904.23.
This is higher than average incomes for most households in the country, with the survey showing the cost of education for most households is 1054.31% or approximately 10 times their average monthly household income.
Across countries where people have higher monthly incomes including Canada, the UK and Australia there has been witnessed nominal decreases in the percentage of income they can expect to allocate, while France and Spain saw notable increases.
In France, families can expect to allocate 5% of their monthly budget this year, while in Spain, they can expect to allocate 7% more than last year on basic school supplies.
In other parts of the world, cost changes were far more drastic, where yearly changes averaged an increase of 78%. 1 in 9 people worldwide rely on money sent from friends and relatives who have migrated abroad for work.
For families whose incomes simply cannot accommodate the cost of these fundamental supplies, remittances make a world of difference in their ability to afford these supplies, as well as steep costs like tuition, transportation and childcare.
While practically every country in the study had increased costs, certain items have drastically increased.
For example, in Australia, a case of 12 pencils has increased more than 4x the cost of the previous year and the cost of notebooks in India is almost 6x as expensive as in 2022.
Globally, 3.6% or 281 million people identify as migrants, a number that has steadily increased over the last 30 years.
Similarly, remittances have increased from Ksh.17.9 trillion (US$.$126B) in 2000 to more than Ksh.99.4 trillion (US$.700 billion) in 2020, with the US, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Switzerland and Germany operating as the top 5 sending countries as of 2020.
While rising costs of living have forced migrants to be more conscious about how they allocate funds for remittances, as of July 2022, WorldRemit data indicates education is one of the top 3 reasons people send money.