School Enrollment in Indonesia

Type Working Paper - World Bank Staff WP
Title School Enrollment in Indonesia
Author(s)
Issue 746
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 1985
URL http://www-wds.worldbank.org/servlet/WDSContentServer/WDSP/IB/2003/07/12/000178830_98101903432410/Re​ndered/PDF/multi0page.pdf
Abstract
The objective of this paper is to relate children's school enrollment and level of educational attainment to their household socioeconomic characteristics and the availability of schools. For primary school enrollment, two issues are explored. The first concerns the characteristics of those children who do not attend school, and the reasons for this, given the relative availability of facilities. The second concerns household expenditures on education, in particular in relation to the availability of facilities and households' ability and willingness to pay for education, given that many schools are privately owned. The data sources are the 1978 National Socioeconomic Survey (SUSENAS) and the 1976/77 Village Social Facilities Survey (FASDES). The SUSENAS sample of some 6,000 households provides a representative geographical distribution of the population of Indonesia. Pertinent information from the SUSENAS includes various household socioeconomic characteristics. The household data are complemented by community-level data pertaining to the availability of social services in villages from the FASDES Survey. The study shows that education in Indonesia, especially beyond the primary level, is very much an income-related phenomenon. Education is also strongly influenced by attitudes as implied by the evidence that the relatively rich and well-educated shun vocational training, even though it appears to yield a comparable return in the market to general training. In addition, the fact that girls do not receive more schooling may be related to parents' attitudes, although their behavior may also be influenced by the lower market returns to girls' education. The data clearly show that availability of facilities promotes school attendance and educational attainment. Yet, household considerations should not be disregarded. In the case of primary schools, which are almost universally available, parents' decisions are critical. Thus policies to increase enrollment may have to deal with parents' attitudes as well as the opportunity cost to the household of children's schooling.

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