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Meeting education development goals: simply a question of money?

What is the link between education outcomes and public education expenditure? Are governments and donors spending enough on education to achieve the millennium development goals (MDGs)? How accurate are indicators used to measure progress towards Education for All (EFA)?

The Dakar World Education Forum in 2000 pledged to ensure that by 2015 all children – and particularly girls, children in difficult circumstances and those belonging to ethnic minorities – have access to free and compulsory primary education. Dakar recommended that developing countries increase the proportion of GNP spent on education from 3.9 per cent to 4.3 per cent. The amount of estimated additional resources required is between $9 and $28 billion.

A paper from the UK’s Institute of Development Studies explores the extent to which increasing the resources available to developing country education systems will lead to the achievement of the millennium development goals. Detailed cross-country analysis indicates that links between resources and educational indicators are weak and that achievement of the MDGs will require more than just increases in expenditure on primary education.

The study suggests:

Monitoring the extent to which expenditure actually promotes education MDGs will require:

 

Source(s):
‘Achieving education for all: how much does money matter?’, IDS Working Paper 175, Institute of Development Studies, by S. Al-Samarrai, December 2002 Full document.

Funded by: Department for International Development, UK

id21 Research Highlight: 28 April, 2003

Further Information:
Samer Al-Samarrai
Institute of Development Studies
University of Sussex
Brighton
Sussex BNI 9RE
UK

Tel: +44 (0) 1273 606261
Fax: +44 (0) 1273 621202
Contact the contributor: s.al-samarrai@ids.ac.uk

Institute of Development Studies

Other related links:
'Free education at the expense of quality? Public education spending in Malawi'

'Achieving schooling for all – lessons in education spending'

'New solution? Can a sectoral approach to education meet international targets?'

'Planning and paying for Africa's educational future'

'Teacher Education in Malawi: matching supply and demand'

Eldis has a collection of online resources about the economics of education

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