• Title of article

    Economic and health efficiency of education funding policy

  • Author/Authors

    T. R. C. Curtin، نويسنده , , E. A. S. Nelson، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
  • Pages
    13
  • From page
    1599
  • To page
    1611
  • Abstract
    Public spending programmes to reduce poverty, expand primary education and improve the economic status of women are recommended priorities of aid agencies and are now gradually being reflected in third world governmentsʹ policies, in response to aid conditions imposed by the World Bank and OECD countries. However outcomes fall short of aspiration. This paper shows that donorsʹ lending policies, especially those restricting public spending on education to the primary level, (1) perpetuate poverty, (2) minimise socio-economic impact of public health programmes and (3) prevent significant improvement in the economic status of women. These effects are the result of fundamental flaws in donorsʹ education policy model. Evidence is presented to show that health status in developing countries will be significantly enhanced by increasing the proportion of the population which has at least post-primary education. Heads of households with just primary education have much the same probability of experiencing poverty and high mortality of their children as those with no education at all. Aid donorsʹ policies, which require governments of developing countries to limit public funding of education to the primary level, have their roots in what is contended here to be an erroneous interpretation of human capital theory. This interpretation focuses only on the declining marginal internal rates of return on public investments in successive levels of schooling and ignores the opposite message of the increasing marginal net present values of those investments. Cars do not travel fastest in their lowest gear despite its fastest acceleration, lifeʹs long journey is not most comfortable for those with only primary schooling.
  • Keywords
    health , Education policy , Developing countries , World Bank
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Serial Year
    1999
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Record number

    600085