There's a danger when playing with words like this.
Privilege is bad. It's something we, as society, should strive to eliminate. When you say education is a privilege, what is the message there?
I understand that the OP, and you, are trying to convey a message of this type: I should be thankful that I get X, not everyone in the world gets X, and I will try to remind myself that X should not be taken for granted. Where X is education, but it can also be clean water, or maybe just the right to live, or the right to not go to a reeducation camp if you criticize the "dear leader".
I subscribe to that type of thinking.
I just don't think that using the word "privilege" is the best way to express this idea.
Oxford dictionary:
privilege - a special right or advantage that a particular person or group of people has
1st example there: Education should be a universal right and not a privilege.
Globally, it's a privilege. Worldwide many girls can not get it. Or poor.
Even clean water is a privilege on a global scale. Perhaps in USA as well, ehm see Flint.
Language evolves. It's 21st century, privilege isn't about feudal taxes anymore. Queue meant tail and gay happy.