Identifying National Level Education Reforms in Developing Settings: An Application to Ethiopia

Type Working Paper
Title Identifying National Level Education Reforms in Developing Settings: An Application to Ethiopia
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2016
URL https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/142355/1/dp9916.pdf
Abstract
Increasing enrollment in primary education has been at the center of international education
policy for well over a decade. In developing parts of the world, significant increases in primary
enrollment are often generated by large national level programs, which can simultaneously
promote overcrowding and reductions in education quality. However, to analyze the trade-off
between increased enrollment and potential reductions in quality one must first identify and
evaluate the impact of the national reform on schooling. This paper provides a method with
which these types of reforms can be identified in developing settings using both temporal and
geographic variation, and readily available data. The method is applied to an early 1990s
reform in Ethiopia based around the release of the Education and Training Policy, which
removed schooling fees from grades one to ten. The model estimates that the reform led to
an increase in schooling of at least 1.2 years, and provides initial evidence that the increased
enrollment in Ethiopia outweighed any cost due to reductions in quality.

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