Title: Economic Issues in the Education Sector
1Economic Issues in theEducation Sector
- Harry Anthony Patrinos
- Human Development Network
2Education as an Industry
- Employment of teachers 5 of labor force
- Millions of pupils
- Spending 2 trillion worldwide
- 1/3 of global market in USA 15 in LDCs
- Education spending as investment
- Human Capital
3Enrolment (millions) in Education, 1997
UNESCO World Education Report 2000
4Education Expenditures( of GNP)
- China 2.3
- India 3.2
- Brazil 5.1
- United States 5.4
- Denmark 8.1
- France 6.0
- World 4.8
- Sub-Saharan Africa 4.1
5Wages Relative to Wageswith No Schooling
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Indonesia
Peru
USA
Thailand
Cote dIvoire
Slovenia
Secondary
Post-secondary
Primary
6Education Originally All Private
- Supply and Finance
- Private tutors
- Religious institutions
- Ancient universities (e.g., Oxford)
- No government (e.g., Somalia)
- No public schools (e.g. Mali communities)
7And Why Not?
- Families and individuals demand education
- Tutors and institutions provide it
- The market works, or does it?
- Why should the government intervene?
8Because.Market Failure
- Equity
- Externalities
- Capital market imperfections
- Information asymmetries
9Market Failure Equity
- The Middle Class and the Poor
- Girls
- Notion of education as human right
- Notion of compulsory education
10Market Failure Externalities
- Minimum levels of literacy for growth
- Science and technology?
- Health and fertility effects
- Spillover effects
11Child Mortality by Education of Mother
12Market Failure Capital Market Imperfections
- Education is long-term business, financial
institutions unwilling to take risk - Difficult for suppliers to borrow against future
revenue stream - Difficult for students to borrow against future
income stream
13Market Failure Information Asymmetries
- Suppliers of education have more information than
purchasers (students) - Result students may end up in institutions other
than those they would have selected with better
information
14ButGovernment Failure
- Equity
- External Efficiency
- Internal Efficiency
- Sustainable finance
15Disparities between Girls and Boys Enrollment
- 1990, avg 6-year-old girl in low, mid-income
country 7.7 yrs of school up from 6.7 yrs, 1980 - Gap between boys and girls widest in S. Asia
1990, girl could expect 6 yrs of school boy, 8.9 - Middle East girl 8.6 years, boy 10.7
16Distribution of Expenditures by Income Quintile
Poor get less education
17Government Failure External Efficiency
- Over-subsidized higher education
- In Africa, spending per student in higher
education is 44x that per primary student - Continuing high proportion of secondary education
that is supply-driven vocational education - Tertiary more costly than primary
18Government Failure Sustainable Finance
- Increasingly difficult to meet demand for
education, especially where little economic
growth (e.g. Africa) - Aid can help, but not sustainable
19Service Delivery
- Public schools lack spur for efficiency
- Why?
- Operated by Government
- No competition
- Teachers paid according to experience and
education, not performance - Schools closed or opened depending on
demographics, not how well they perform
20So What is the Answer?
- Market has strengths and weaknesses (failure)
- Government has strengths and weaknesses
(failure)
- Draw on strengths of both market and government
- Minimize weaknesses of both
- Context-specific
21Emerging Role of Government
- Draw on Market Strengths
- Matching of Demand and Supply
- Competition
- Willingness to pay
- Draw on Government Strengths
- Broad National Vision
- Capacity to redistribute and promote equity
- Information
- Avoid Market Failure
- Promote Equity
- Achieve Externalities
- Overcome Capital Market Imperfections
- Overcome Information Asymmetries
- Avoid Government Failure
- Promote Equity
- Avoid Inefficiency
- Achieve Sustainable Finance
22Financing and Provision of Education
23Cost-Effectiveness Analysisof Inputs for
Portuguese Achievement, Brazil
Achievement change by input (coefficients) 3.513
-5.650 7.228 8.969 6.403 4.703
4.864 0.055 -0.160 3.594 3.17
7 2.383
Achievement gains per US spent 1.94 - 0.82 0.56 3
.88 2.67 1.43 0.14 - 1.95 1.44 0.43
Input Water School furniture School
facilities Hardware Textbook usage Writing
materials Software Teacher salary Training Logos
II 4 year primary 3 years secondary
Cost (US) 1.81 5.45 8.80
16.06 1.65 1.76 3.41 0.39 2.50 1.84 2.21 5
.55
24Education Expenditure and Achievement
TIMSS Ranking
Maths
Science
United States Switzerland Austria Canada Norway De
nmark Japan Netherlands New Zealand Spain Czech
Rep. Korea Hungary
28 17 8 25 12 8 18 18 26 20 27 34 3 3
9 6 24 22 31 27 6 2 2 4 14 9
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
Expenditure/student
25Determinants of School Enrollment, Bolivia
Primary
Secondary
Basico
Intermedio
Urban
Rural
Urban
Urban
Rural
Rural
Mothers Education
Fathers Education
Age
Gender (Male)
Household Size
-
Recent Migration
-
-
(Spanish
Language
speaking only)
Household Income
26Vietnam Expenditure Scenarios
27Recommendations
- Target subsidies to basic and to poor
- Cost recovery in tertiary
- Go slow with vocational
- Reduce dropout and repetition
- Quality enhancement
- monitor learning
- increase instructional hours
- teacher upgrading and regular in-service trng
- increase govt spending on textbooks and learning
materials
28Ethiopia Sector Investment Program
- GER 25
- Target 50 (from 3.1 to 7 million students)
- Distance Build new schools close to students,
especially in remote, rural areas - 2,500 primary schools will be built
- 5,000 will be upgraded
- 5,000 will be renovated
29School Buildings
- Technological Alternatives
- Mutually exclusive alternatives
- Lower present value
- Opportunity cost of capital
30Analysis of Alternatives
31Analysis of Alternatives
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33(No Transcript)
34Messages
- Investigate the market for education
- Demand and supply
- Separate finance and provision
- Role of private, NGO sector
- New roles for
- government, students, families, communities