(iii) Educational effort
Despite the general economic and financial conditions described
above, many nations have made impressive attempts to maintain their financial
commitment to basic education. The pattern suggests that a willingness to
support the meeting of basic learning needs is a necessary condition to offset
the most harmful effects of financial restraints. Between 1980 and 1987,
fourteen of the twenty-two low-income countries reporting expenditure data
maintained or increased total education expenditure as a percentage of GNP.
Fifteen of the twenty-four lower-middle-income countries and fourteen of the
sixteen upper-middle-income countries did the same. A similar pattern exists for
education as a percentage of total government expenditure. Some countries,
despite their economic difficulties, have made the commitment to reallocate
government expenditures in favour of, rather than away from, education. An
appropriate inference from this data is that although choices concerning
educational expenditures are constrained, it is still within a countrys
own ability to choose education.
A large number of countries (especially in the poorest
categories) have maintained or increased the share of primary education in the
total education budget between 1980 and 1987. More than half of the low-income
and lower-middle income nations reporting comparable data have managed to
increase primary educations share in their education budgets. However, in
two-thirds of these countries this increase was coupled with a decline in the
per pupil expenditure (in current dollars) during the same period, due to
increasing enrollments. On the other hand, in the upper-middle-income economies,
and notably in Latin America, primary educations share in some
countries education budgets has declined because of the relative expansion
of secondary and tertiary education. Because total resources for education have
increased in many of these nations, the relative decline of primary
educations share does not automatically imply a decline in per pupil
expenditures on primary education. Even with increasing primary school
populations, five of the six countries in this category that experienced a
decline in primary educations share, managed to increase their per pupil
expenditure between 1980 and 1987.
As a further indication of education efforts, a large majority
of countries continued to expand enrolment during the 1975-85 decade, and some
even reduced teacher-pupil ratios. Because of governmental financial constraints
and parental choice, many countries have an increased proportion of their
primary school pupils in private schools. Even though many private schools
receive some form of direct or indirect government subsidy (and almost all
benefit from teachers prepared in public institutions), the expansion of private
schools can allow governments to target a portion of their expenditures more
directly on the needs of the disadvantaged; for example, through subsidy
formulas based on community income. There always is the danger that the private
system will evolve into an elite alternative with access determined by family
income alone, or that public schools will be comparatively neglected. However,
appropriate planning can avert these effects by assuring a recognition of the
inevitable interdependency of the two sectors.
The development of private education has been more dramatic in
the industrial economies than among the developing economies. Only seven of
twenty-four low-income countries showed an increase in the proportion of pupils
in private primary education, while twenty-three of forty-nine middle-income
countries, and fourteen of twenty industrial market economies did so. One
inference is that the more advantaged nations are benefiting from the
mobilization of nongovernment resources for primary education, while in
low-income countries, whose public budgets are already burdened in other ways,
governments continue to assume the highest proportion of fiscal responsibility
for educational services. Obviously, private resources in low-income nations
also are constrained, but nongovernment alternatives can assist in financing
even in the poorest nations. For example, Haiti has more than half its primary
students in private schools, and there are initiatives to mobilize family and
community resources for basic education throughout sub-Saharan Africa.
Parallel efforts (by public, religious, and nongovernment
organizations) to provide out-of-school basic education for children are harder
to document in a comparable quantified manner. Despite difficult economic
conditions, however, many nations have maintained and some have expanded their
out-of-school programmes equivalent to formal primary education. These often
provide instruction with the same content as that of primary schools and also
often teach basic knowledge and skills to youth and adults. Better documentation
of such programmes and their participants, costs, and results will be required
for the future planning of basic
education.