Title: EDUCATION EXPENDITURE AND OUTCOME IN SENEGAL
1EDUCATION EXPENDITURE AND OUTCOME IN SENEGAL
- BY
- Aloysius Ajab AMIN
- and
- Tharcisse NTILIVAMUNDA
2OUTLINE
- Introduction
- Objective Scope
- Education Sector in Senegal
- Brief literature Review
- Methodology
- Analysis and Results
- Tentative Conclusion
3INTRODUCTION
- Senegal has about 11.6m people.
- Primary education is compulsory
- Average year of schooling of adults is about 2.6
- education spending is about 3.6 percent of GDP.
- Female enrolment share in primary school is about
46.5 percent while it is about 39.6 percent in
secondary schools. - It is estimated that about 70 percent of the
primary school aged-girls are in school.
4OBJECTIVE SCOPE
- To analyse the relationship between education
expenditure and outcomes in Senegal and then,
draw policy inference. - Focus is on primary education.
- Study covers the period 1970 To 2008.
5WHAT THE LITERATURE IS SAYING
- The relationship between education resources and
educational outcome is weak in cross-country
analysis (Al- Samarrai, 2003). - Why?
- poor data.
- failure to account for other factors such as
household spending. - Intensive use of existing school infrastructure (
not taken account of). - Efficiency level of public spending across
countries. - Heavy expenditure at general administration and
not at school level.
6METHODOLOGY DATA
- Descriptive Analysis
- Econometric Modelling
- DATA SOURCES
- Statistical department of Ministry of Finance
- Ministry of Education and studies on Senegalese
Education - National household surveys including ESAM III
and Other Surveys - The World Bank and other sources
7Trend of Education Expenditure (EE) in GDP and
Government Budget (GB)
8Trend of the Staff and the Equipment budgets
(1970 to 2000)
9Trend of Education Expenditures (EE) as a ratio
of Capital Budget (CB) in the 2000s
10Distribution of recurrent budget by levels
(1983/84 to 1990/2000)
11Distribution of recurrent budget by education
level (1983/1984 to 1990/2000)
12Trend In Enrolment rates in the three levels from
1970 to 2000
13Trend In Enrolment rates in primary and secondary
levels in the 2000s.
14ECONOMETRIC MODEL
- We model expenditure-outcome relationship as
follows - Dependent Variable
- Enrolment
- Independent variables
- Expenditure
- DGP per capita
- Enr ? ?1Ex ?2Gdp ?
- Enr enrolment, Ex expenditure, Gdp GDP per
capita
15 Table 1 Estimates on Primary Education
enrolment
Dependent Variable LOG(ENR) Â Â Â Â
Method Least Squares    Â
Number of observations 36
Variable Coefficient Std. Error t-Statistic Prob.
C -1.025048 0.423935 -2.417936 0.0221
LOG(ENR(-1)) 0.772326 0.058141 13.28365 0.0000
LOG(EXPENDSM) 0.080904 0.018677 4.331816 0.0002
LOG(GDP/TETE) 0.008072 0.063795 0.126523 0.9002
    Â
R-squared 0.996533 Mean dependent var Mean dependent var -0.575458
Adjusted R-squared 0.996055 S.D. dependent var S.D. dependent var 0.240447
S.E. of regression 0.015102 Akaike info criterion Akaike info criterion -5.412920
Sum squared resid 0.006614 Schwarz criterion Schwarz criterion -5.188455
Log likelihood 97.01964 F-statistic  2084.078
Durbin-Watson stat 2.160272 Prob(F-statistic) Prob(F-statistic) 0.000000
16Table 2 Primary Education Enrolment Female
Dependent Variable LOG(MAL_ENSM) Dependent Variable LOG(MAL_ENSM) Â Â Â
Method Least Squares    Â
Included observations 36 Included observations 36 Â Â Â
Variable Coefficient Std. Error t-Statistic Prob.
C -0.202591 0.684821 -0.295831 0.7693
LOG(MAL_ENSM(-1)) 0.791555 0.091105 8.688339 0.0000
LOG(EXPENDSM) 0.057290 0.025579 2.239773 0.0322
LOG(GDPTETE/1000) 0.079586 0.107602 0.739635 0.4649
R-squared 0.975389 Mean dependent var Mean dependent var 4.131460
Adjusted R-squared 0.973081 S.D. dependent var S.D. dependent var 0.201349
S.E. of regression 0.033035 Akaike info criterion Akaike info criterion -3.878050
Sum squared resid 0.034922 Schwarz criterion Schwarz criterion -3.702103
Log likelihood 73.80489 F-statistic  422.7394
Durbin-Watson stat 1.514704 Prob(F-statistic) Prob(F-statistic) 0.000000
17Table 3 Primary Education Enrolment - male
Dependent Variable LOG(ENR_FESM) Dependent Variable LOG(ENR_FESM) Â Â Â
Method Least Squares    Â
Included observations 34 Included observations 34 Â Â Â
Variable Coefficient Std. Error t-Statistic Prob.
C -0.043634 0.892582 -0.048885 0.9613
LOG(ENR_FESM(-1)) 0.698184 0.110855 6.298147 0.0000
LOG(EXPENDSM) 0.100989 0.040529 2.491747 0.0185
LOG(GDPTETE/1000) 0.022322 0.139882 0.159575 0.8743
R-squared 0.982749 Mean dependent var Mean dependent var 3.817069
Adjusted R-squared 0.981024 S.D. dependent var S.D. dependent var 0.248613
S.E. of regression 0.034247 Akaike info criterion Akaike info criterion -3.800306
Sum squared resid 0.035186 Schwarz criterion Schwarz criterion -3.620734
Log likelihood 68.60520 F-statistic  569.6907
Durbin-Watson stat 1.742046 Prob(F-statistic) Prob(F-statistic) 0.000000
18Table 4 Completion Rate
Dependent Variable LOG(COMPLETION)Â Dependent Variable LOG(COMPLETION)Â Dependent Variable LOG(COMPLETION)Â Dependent Variable LOG(COMPLETION)Â Dependent Variable LOG(COMPLETION)Â
Method Least Squares    Â
Sample 1989 to 2006 Â Sample 1989 to 2006 Â Sample 1989 to 2006 Â Sample 1989 to 2006 Â Sample 1989 to 2006 Â
Variable Coefficient Std. Error t-Statistic Prob.
C -3.366836 0.835848 -4.028048 0.0024
LOG(EXPENDSM) 0.047894 0.051209 0.935275 0.3717
LOG(COMPLETION(-1)) 0.396958 0.167285 2.372938 0.0391
LOG(GDP/TETE) 0.883666 0.289275 3.054765 0.0122
R-squared 0.933523 Mean dependent var Mean dependent var 3.696027
Adjusted R-squared 0.906932 S.D. dependent var S.D. dependent var 0.069921
S.E. of regression 0.021331 Akaike info criterion Akaike info criterion -4.596123
Sum squared resid 0.004550 Schwarz criterion Schwarz criterion -4.360106
Log likelihood 39.47092 F-statistic  35.10693
Durbin-Watson stat 2.448932 Prob(F-statistic) Prob(F-statistic) 0.000007
19FINDINGS FROM MODEL
- Enrolment significantly depends on previous
enrolment. - enrolment significantly depends on public
expenditures. - Per capita income does not have much impact on
enrolment - Expenditure is more important in the case of
girls primary education enrolment than that of
the boys. - In general an increase in the expenditure in
primary education of 10 would tend to increase
primary education enrolment rate by 8.1. - In the case of girls an increase in expenditure
of 10 tend to improve enrolment rate of 10.1 as
against that of boys of 5.7
20FURTHER RESEARCH ISSUES.
- What remains to be done include the following
- Estimating an earning model.
- A complete discussion of the four main outcomes
(Enrolment, completion, repetition and drop out
rates) and linking them to education spending,
including the composition of expenditure- using
micro and macro data. - If possible, this would be also examined at the
regional level of Senegal. - Updating or completing the data set
- Completing literature review
- More analysis and discussion of the results
- Policy implications and conclusion
21