Type | Report |
Title | A moral obligation, an economic priority: the urgency of enrolling out of school children |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
URL | http://www.odisea.org.mx/centro_informacion/educacion/estudio/Urgency-of-Enrolling-OOSC.pdf |
Abstract | E xecutive Summary Educate A Child (EAC)’s mission to support the Education for All initiative and Millennium Development Goal for education is more pressing and relevant than ever. Although significant progress toward achieving universal primary education has been made over the past decade, out-of-school children (OOSC) remain a pervasive global problem. According to one estimate, there are 61 million OOSC in the world (UIS 2012). To underscore the importance of reducing the global number of out-ofschool children, this paper summarizes the research on the multi-faceted benefits of primary education and estimates the economic costs of large outof-school child populations. Part I of the paper reviews the literature on the benefits of primary education, covering the vast range of positive economic, social, political, psychosocial, and environmental impacts for individuals and society that are associated with primary education attainment. The evidence in Part I highlights the importance of primary education in breaking the intergenerational transmission of poverty and building dynamic, prosperous societies. The second half of the paper uses two economic methods to estimate the cost of OOSC in six countries where OOSC are still prevalent (Bangladesh, Cote d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, India, Mali, and Yemen). The six countries were selected to provide geographic variety and on the basis of data availability. Bangladesh, Cote d’Ivoire, and India are EAC countries where EAC is operational, and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Yemen are both EAC priorities. The first estimation approach uses labor market data to estimate the total earnings that will be forfeited in the near future due to undereducated workers (today’s population of out-of-school children). The second approach consists of a macroeconomic model that estimates the income gap that has resulted from large past populations of out-of-school children. Part II reveals that for many countries with high OOSC prevalence, the economic benefit associated with achieving universal primary education exceeds multiple years of economic growth. There are significant economic incentives to educate current OOSC populations (up to 7% of gross domestic product) and even larger potential gains from providing remedial education to the OOSC of past generations. Taken together, the findings of this report should provide impetus for efforts to reach out-of-school children and ensure that all citizens have access to primary education and the opportunity to reach their full economic and social potential. |
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