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State Universities and Colleges (SUC) in the Philippines refers to any public institution of higher learning that was created by an Act passed by the Philippine Congress. These institutions are fully subsidized by the National Government, and may be considered as a corporate body.〔Guadalquiver, Nanette L. "(SUCs lament govt's inadequate financial aid )" ''Sun Star Iloilo''. July 07, 2004.〕 Among the State Colleges and Universities in the country, the University of the Philippines has always been recognized as the nation's premier university and has likewise been strengthened by law (Republic Act 9500)〔http://up.edu.ph/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/RA_9500.pdf〕 as the "National University" of the Philippines. ==Endowment== SUCs lamented the Philippine government's inadequate financial aid. For the 2003-2004, SUCs only had PHP 16.8 billion, and about 40 percent of it went to the University of the Philippines and the Mindanao State University.〔 However, in 2008, the Philippine Congress allotted PHP 20.8 billion in subsidy for the operations of state universities and colleges.〔 Collectively, SUCs have a student population of approximately 865,000, which means that every student is subsidized by an average of PHP 24,000 per school year. Each Filipino family contributes PHP 1,185 a year to run these schools through their tax payments.〔Martin, Sammy. "(Congress gives state colleges,universities increased subsidy )" ''The Manila Times''. May 29, 2008.〕 Of the total amount, PHP 15.4 billion for the salaries of faculty members and employees.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「State Universities and Colleges (Philippines)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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