Schooling in Developing Countries: The Roles of Supply, Demand and Government Policy

P. Orazem, E. Kling
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引用次数: 135

Abstract

In developing countries, rising incomes, increased demand for more skilled labor, and government investments of considerable resources on building and equipping schools and paying teachers have contributed to global convergence in enrollment rates and completed years of schooling. Nevertheless, in many countries substantial education gaps persist between rich and poor, between rural and urban households and between males and females. To address these gaps, some governments have introduced school vouchers or cash transfers programs that are targeted to disadvantaged children. Others have initiated programs to attract or retain students by expanding school access or by setting higher teacher eligibility requirements or increasing the number of textbooks per student. While enrollments have increased, there has not been a commensurate improvement in knowledge and skills of students. Establishing the impact of these policies and programs requires an understanding of the incentives and constraints faced by all parties involved, the school providers, the parents and the children. The chapter reviews the economic literature on the determinants of schooling outcomes and schooling gaps with a focus on static and dynamic household responses to specific policy initiatives, perceived economic returns and other incentives. It discusses measurement and estimation issues involved with empirically testing these models and reviews findings. Governments have increasingly adopted the practice of experimentation and evaluation before taking steps to expand new policies. Often pilot programs are initiated in settings that are atypically appropriate for the program, so that the results overstate the likely impact of expanding the program to other settings. Program expansion can also result in general equilibrium feedback effects that do not apply to isolated pilots. These behavioral models provide a useful context within which to frame the likely outcomes of such expansion.
发展中国家的学校教育:供给、需求和政府政策的作用
在发展中国家,收入的增加,对熟练劳动力的需求增加,以及政府在建设和装备学校以及支付教师工资方面投入大量资源,促成了全球入学率和完成学业年数的趋同。然而,在许多国家,贫富之间、城乡家庭之间以及男女之间的教育差距仍然很大。为了解决这些差距,一些政府推出了针对弱势儿童的教育券或现金转移支付项目。其他一些州则启动了一些项目,通过扩大入学机会、提高教师资格要求或增加每个学生的教科书数量来吸引或留住学生。虽然入学人数增加了,但学生的知识和技能并没有相应的提高。要确定这些政策和项目的影响,就需要了解学校、家长和孩子等各方所面临的激励和制约因素。本章回顾了关于教育成果和教育差距决定因素的经济学文献,重点关注家庭对具体政策举措、感知经济回报和其他激励措施的静态和动态反应。它讨论了与经验测试这些模型和审查结果有关的度量和估计问题。各国政府越来越多地采用在采取步骤扩大新政策之前进行试验和评价的做法。通常,试点项目是在非常适合该项目的环境中启动的,因此结果夸大了将该项目扩展到其他环境的可能影响。程序扩展也会导致一般均衡反馈效应,但不适用于孤立的飞行员。这些行为模型提供了一个有用的背景,在其中构建这种扩张的可能结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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