83499 A WORLD BANK STUDY Education in Sub-Saharan Africa COMPARING FAITH-INSPIRED, PRIVATE SECULAR, AND PUBLIC SCHOOLS Quentin Wodon Education in Sub-Saharan Africa A WO R L D BA N K S T U DY Education in Sub-Saharan Africa Comparing Faith-Inspired, Private Secular, and Public Schools Quentin Wodon Washington, D.C. © 2014 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street NW, Washington DC 20433 Telephone: 202-473-1000; Internet: www.worldbank.org Some rights reserved 1 2 3 4    16 15 14 13 This work is a product of the staff of The World Bank with external contributions. Note that The World Bank does not necessarily own each component of the content included in the work. The World Bank therefore does not warrant that the use of the content contained in the work will not infringe on the rights of third parties. The risk of claims resulting from such infringement rests solely with you. 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Under the Creative Commons Attribution license, you are free to copy, distribute, transmit, and adapt this work, including for commercial purposes, under the fol- lowing conditions: Attribution—Please cite the work as follows: Wodon, Quentin. 2014. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa: Comparing Faith-Inspired, Private Secular, and Public Schools. World Bank Study. Washington, DC: World Bank. doi: 10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1. License: Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 3.0 Translations—If you create a translation of this work, please add the following disclaimer along with the attribution: This translation was not created by The World Bank and should not be considered an official World Bank translation. The World Bank shall not be liable for any content or error in this translation. All queries on rights and licenses should be addressed to World Bank Publications, The World Bank Group, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; fax: 202-522-2625; e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. ISBN (paper): 978-0-8213-9965-1 ISBN (electronic): 978-0-8213-9966-8 DOI: 10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Cover photo: Community school in Macaci, a suburb of Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire. © Ami Vitale / The World Bank. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Wodon, Quentin. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa : comparing faith-inspired, private secular, and public schools / by Quentin Wodon. pages cm Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 978-0-8213-9965-1 (pbk. : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-8213-9966-8 (e-book) 1. Education—Africa, Sub-Saharan. 2. Education and state—Africa, Sub-Saharan. 3. Education—Africa, Sub-Saharan—Statistics. I. Title. LA1501.W64 2013 370.96—dc23 2013023212 Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Contents Acknowledgments ix Abbreviations xi Overview 1 Market Share of Private Schools 1 Reach to the Poor 3 Private Cost of Education 4 Satisfaction 6 Reasons for Choosing Specific Schools 8 Performance 10 Conclusion 11 Chapter 1 Introduction 13 Chapter 2 Motivation and Background 17 Introduction 17 Comparative Advantage of Faith-Inspired Institutions 20 Combination of Cross-Country and Country-Specific Work 24 Conclusion 25 Note 25 Chapter 3 Data and Methodology 27 Introduction 27 Household Survey Data 28 Qualitative and Small Sample Data Collection 31 Data Validity and Analysis 32 Limited Scope of the Study 35 Conclusion 38 Notes 39 Chapter 4 Market Share 41 Introduction 41 Cross-Country Comparisons 42 Additional Evidence for Ghana and Burkina Faso 47 Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1  v vi Contents Conclusion 49 Note 49 Chapter 5 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable 51 Introduction 51 Cross-Country Evidence 53 Additional Evidence for Ghana and Burkina Faso 59 Conclusion 63 Notes 63 Chapter 6 Private Cost of Education 65 Introduction 65 Cross-Country Evidence 66 Additional Evidence for Ghana and Burkina Faso 70 Conclusion 77 Chapter 7 Satisfaction and Preferences 79 Introduction 79 Cross-Country Evidence 81 Additional Evidence for Ghana and Burkina Faso 84 Conclusion 95 Chapter 8 Conclusion 97 Appendix A Faith and Formal Models of School Choice: An Illustration 101 Appendix B Rationale for Combining Quantitative and Qualitative Data 105 Note 107 Appendix C Identification of Faith-Inspired Schools in Multipurpose National Household Surveys 109 Appendix D Sample Size for the Qualitative Fieldwork 113 Appendix E Standard Errors for Statistical Tables 115 Appendix F Role of Faith-Inspired Institutions in Tertiary Education 117 Appendix G Detailed Regression Estimates 123 Appendix H Illegitimate Fees in Service Delivery 131 References 135 Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Contents vii Boxes O.1 Data Sources—Household Surveys 2 O.2 Data Sources—Qualitative Work 8 O.3 Example of Testimonies by Parents 10 Figures O.1 Market Share of Public, Faith-Inspired and Private   Secular Schools 2 O.2 Shares of Students in Private Primary School   by Welfare Quintile 5 O.3 Average Private Cost of Schooling by Type of Provider 6 O.4 Satisfaction Rates with the Schooling Received 7 Tables O.1 Shares of Students in Each Type of School by Welfare  Quintile 4 O.2 Private Cost of Schooling per Child for Households 5 O.3 Satisfaction Rates with the Various Types of Schools 7 O.4 Main Reasons for Choosing the School, Qualitative   Field Work, 2010 9 2.1 Potential Comparative Advantages and Weaknesses of FISs 22 3.1 Identification of FISs in the Education Modules of Selected   Household Surveys 29 4.1 Market Share Estimates from UIS Administrative Data,  Education 43 4.2 Market Share Estimates from Multipurpose Surveys, Education 45 4.3 Market Share by Type of Primary School, Burkina Faso 48 4.4 Trends in Primary School Enrolment by Type of School,   Burkina Faso 48 5.1 Benefit Incidence for Education by Type of Provider 54 5.2 Enrollment Rates by Type of Schools and Disability Status,   Ghana 2003 61 5.3 Impact of Disability on School Enrolment by Type of School,   Ghana 2003 62 6.1 Cost of School Fees and PTA Dues in Primary Schools 67 6.2 Cost of School Fees and PTA Dues in Secondary Schools 68 6.3 Cost of Primary Education by Type of School, Divided by   10,000, 2005/06 (GHC) 70 6.4 Selected Correlates of the Cost of Education, Ghana, 2005/06 72 6.5 Reason for Not Attending School in Burkina Faso,   Children Aged 7–12 (FCFA) 73 6.6 Average Annual School Expenses per Child, Burkina   Faso Fieldwork 73 Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 viii Contents 6.7 School Inputs by Type of School, Burkina Faso 2008/09 75 6.8 Passing Rate in Primary Schools by Grade, Burkina Faso  2008/09 77 7.1 Countries in the Sample with Data on Satisfaction   in Education Modules 81 7.2 Satisfaction Rates with Primary Education Services 82 7.3 Satisfaction Rates with Secondary Education Services 83 7.4 Main Reasons for Choosing the School, Qualitative   Fieldwork, 2010 84 7.5 Advantages of the School You Selected, Qualitative   Fieldwork, 2010 85 7.6 What Should Children Learn at School? Qualitative   Fieldwork, 2010 86 7.7 Evaluation of Schools by Parents, Qualitative Fieldwork,   Ghana 2010 87 7.8 Reasons for Choosing the School over Other Options,   Burkina Faso 89 7.9 Comparison of Various Schools in Burkina Faso, Burkina Faso 90 7.10 Literacy and Numeracy in Primary School, Children   Aged 10–15, Ghana 92 7.11 Selected Correlates of Subjective Literacy and Numeracy,  Ghana 94 C.1 Multipurpose Household Surveys Used for Cross-Country  Comparisons 110 C.2 Identification of the Various Types of Education Facilities 111 D.1 Sample Size for Qualitative Data Collection in Ghana   and Burkina Faso 114 E.1 Standard Errors for Means of Dichotomized Variables   Under Equal Weights and Simple Random Sampling 116 F.1 Market Share of Various Types of Providers, Tertiary Level 118 F.2 Benefit Incidence by Type of Provider, Tertiary Level 119 F.3 Cost of Tertiary Education by Type of Provider,   Local Currencies 120 F.4 Satisfaction with Tertiary Education by Type of Provider 122 G.1 Correlates of the Cost of Education for Households,   Ghana, 2005/06 123 G.2 Correlates of Perceptions of Literacy and Numeracy,   10–15 Years Old (Primary), Ghana 2005/06 125 G.3 Correlates of School Enrollment and Impact of Disability,   Ghana 2003 127 H.1 Gratifications Paid as a Share of Total Income, Sierra   Leone 2003 133 H.2 Share of Households Paying Illegitimate School Fees,   Cameroon 2001 134 Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Acknowledgments This study was written by Quentin Wodon in part on the basis of background papers coauthored with Franck Adoho, Regina Gemignani, Mari Shojo, and Clarence Tsimpo. It is a product of the Human Development Network at the World Bank. Continuous support and advise were provided by Robin Horn, Harry Patrinos, and Elizabeth King. The peer reviewers were Mathieu Brossard and Deon Filmer. Comments from William Barbieri, William Dinges, Charles Jones, Ritva Reinikka, and Ernest Zampelli were very valuable. Any error or omis- sion in the study remains that of the author only and the views expressed in the study are those of the author only and need not represent those of the World Bank, its Executive Directors, or the countries they represent. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   ix Abbreviations 1-2-3 Enquête 123 CAS Country Assistance Strategy CBO Community-based Organization CCT Conditional Cash Transfers CE1/2 Cours Elémentaire 1/2 CEP Certificat d’Etudes Primaires CHA Christian Health Association CM1/2 Cours Moyen 1/2 CP1/2 Cours Préparatoire 1/2 CSO Civil Society Organisation CWIQ Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire dF/dX Marginal effect in probit regression DFID Department for International Development DHS Demographic and Health Survey DRC Democratic Republic of Congo EACVM Enquête Annuelle sur les conditions de vie des ménages ECAM2 Enquête Camerounaise Auprès des Ménages II ECOM  Enquête Congolaise auprès des Ménages pour l’évaluation de la pauvreté ECOSIT2 Enquête sur la Consommation du Secteur Informel au Tchad II EICV2 Enquête intégrale sur les conditions de vie des ménages II ELIM Enquête Légère Intégrée auprès des Ménages EMIS Education Management Information System ENBC Enquête Nationale sur le Budget et la Consommation des Ménages ENV Enquête sur le Niveau de Vie des Ménages de Côte d’Ivoire ESPS Enquête de Suivi de la Pauvreté au Sénégal FBO Faith-based Organization FCFA Franc CFA FII Faith-Inspired Institution or Initiative Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   xi xii Abbreviations FIO Faith-Inspired Organization FII Faith-Inspired School GDP Gross Domestic Product GES Ghana Education Service GFSP Ghana School Feeding Program GHC Ghana Cedis (before conversion) GH¢ Ghana cedi (after conversion) GLSS Ghana Living Standard Survey GLSS5 Ghana Living Standard Survey, Fifth Round IHS Integrated Household Survey HDN Human Development Network (The World Bank) IA Instituteur Adjoint IAC Instituteur Adjoint Certifié IC Instituteur Certifié ICSED International Standard Classification of Education IEU Islamic Education Unit ICRO Islamic Culture and Relations Organisation INGO International Nongovernmental Organisation IRS Internal Revenue Service JHS Junior High School KIHBS Kenya Integrated Household Budget Survey LCMS Living Conditions Monitoring Survey LSS Living Standards Survey MDG Millennium Development Goal MICS Multiple Indicators Cluster Survey MoE Ministry of Education, Science and Sports MoU Memorandum of Understanding NEA National Eligibility Assessment NGO Nongovernmental Organization ODI Overseas Development Institute OECD Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development OVC Orphans and Vulnerable Children PASEC Programme on the Analysis of Education Systems PETS Public Expenditure Tracking Survey PPP Public-Private Partnership PPP Purchasing Power Parity PSU Primary Sampling Unit PTA Parent-Teacher Association QUIBB Enquête Questionnaire des Indicateurs de Base du Bien-être Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Abbreviations xiii RCT Rational choice theory RME Religious and Moral Education SHS Senior High School SHIES Swaziland Household Income and Expenditure Survey SLIHS Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey TVET Technical and Vocational Education and Training UIS UNESCO Institute of Statistics UNESCO United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization UNFPA United Nations Population Fund UNHS Uganda National Household Survey UNICEF United Nations Children’s Fund UK United Kingdom US United States USAID United States Agency for International Development WFP World Food Program WVS World Values Survey Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Overview Within the context of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), donors and governments have made improvements in human development a key priority. Public sector service providers continue to have a leading role in efforts to improve education outcomes, but private providers, including faith-inspired schools (FISs), may also contribute. Given that many developing countries may miss the education targets of the MDGs, it is all the more important for donors as well as national and local governments to recognize the role played by FISs, and where appropriate to support them in their service delivery activities, especially when they reach the poor. Yet in-depth empirical assessments of the role that FISs play in providing education services have not been conducted to-date. The objec- tive of this book is to contribute to an assessment of the role of FISs in education service delivery in Africa. This synthesis of the book briefly discusses the data used for the analysis and presents the main results in terms of the market share of FISs and other private providers, the extent to which they reach to the poor, the pri- vate costs for households of their services and the satisfaction with the services provided, and the reasons why some households choose faith-inspired providers. Market Share of Private Schools What is the market share of private education service providers in Africa, and within private providers, what is the contribution of faith-inspired and secular providers? In order to answer this question, data from household surveys dis- tinguishing public, faith-inspired and private secular schools from 16 countries were analyzed (see Box O.1 on the data sources). A number of key findings emerge from the analysis: Finding #1: Faith-inspired schools enroll 14 percent of all primary school stu- dents and 11 percent of secondary school students. For secular private secular schools, the shares are 11 percent and 16 percent. Key results are provided in figure O.1. The average market share for FISs in primary schools in the 16 countries is at 14 percent, versus 12 percent for secular private schools. Public schools account for 74 percent of all schools. The situation is however very different depending of the country. The market shares for FISs Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1  1 2 Overview Box O.1  Data Sources—Household Surveys This study is based on multipurpose and nationally representative household surveys imple- mented in 16 Sub-Saharan African countries. The choice of countries was based on data ­availability, using surveys with education modules that identify whether children go to public, faith-inspired, or private secular schools. Information in some of the surveys is also available on the cost of education for households, as well as on the satisfaction of parents with the edu- cation received by their children and the reasons for nonsatisfaction. The 16 countries and corresponding household surveys used for this study are as follows: Burkina Faso (EACVM-QUIBB 2007); Burundi (QUIBB 2006); Cameroon (ECAM 2007); Demo- cratic Republic of Congo (123 survey 2004/05); Ghana (two surveys: CWIQ 2003 and GLSS5 2005/2006); Kenya (KIHBS 2005); Malawi (HIS-2 2004); Mali (ELIM-QUIBB 2006); Niger (ENBC 2007); Nigeria (LMS 2003/2004); ROC (ECOM-QUIBB 2005); Senegal (ESPS 2005); Sierra Leone (SLIHS 2003); Swaziland (SHIES 2009); Uganda (UNHS 2010); and Zambia (LCMS IV 2004). Figure O.1  Market Share of Public, Faith-Inspired and Private Secular Schools percent (average across the countries) 100 80 60 Percent 40 20 0 Public Faith-inspired Private secular Type of provider Primary Secondary Source: Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. range from 1.2 percent in Mali to 69.8 percent in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The high market share in the Democratic Republic of Congo (and Sierra Leone) relates in part to conflict that led to state failure and poorly functioning public schools, but also to historical factors. Beyond these two coun- tries, the highest market share for FISs in the 16 countries is at 25.7 percent in Swaziland. What about secondary education? Mali is again the country with the smallest market share, and the highest market share is obtained for the Democratic Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Overview 3 Republic of Congo. The average market share for FISs is at 11.2 percent, versus 16.2 percent for private secular schools and 73 percent for public schools. How do the market share estimates obtained in this study compare with administrative data? A recent UNESCO Institute of Statistics (UIS) publication provides estimates of the share of enrollment in private schools at both the pri- mary and secondary levels circa 1999 and 2009 (UNESCO 2011). In the UIS report, private schools are defined as those schools that are controlled and man- aged by a private body such as a nongovernmental organization, a religious body, a special interest group, a foundation, or a business enterprise. Both nonprofit and for-profit schools are considered. Thus, what defines the public/private status of a school is who controls and manages the school, not who funds the school. Privately managed or controlled schools that are funded by the government are considered as private. For 2009, UIS data are available for 35 countries. The market share of private schools is below five percent in 11 countries, and above 15 percent in nine coun- tries. The average market share for all countries with data in 2009 is 12.8 percent (simple average not weighted by country populations). For the countries with data in 1999, the average private market share is 16.6 percent, but this is driven up by Zimbabwe (without Zimbabwe, the average private market share is 14.3 percent). At the secondary level, the average private market share in 2009 for the countries with data is at 20.0 percent, while it was at 25.0 percent for the year 1999, but this is again due in large part to data available for Zimbabwe in 1999, but not in 2009. Finding #2: The order of magnitude of the market share of private schools is similar in surveys and administrative data, but it is slightly higher in surveys, pos- sibly in part because some private schools operate without official recognition. For the countries where estimates are available from both the household sur- veys used in this study and the UIS data, the average difference in the estimates of private market share is 3.9 percent at the primary level, so that there is a rela- tively good correspondence in the data. The average private market share observed in the surveys is higher than the average share reported to the UIS by Ministries of Education, and this is what one would expect. Indeed, it is likely that some schools that do provide services to households are not recorded by Ministries of Education, because they operate without any official recognition. Reach to the Poor Do faith-inspired schools reach the poor? One way to answer this question is to assess whether in their own clientele, FISs serve the poor—as defined on the basis of their consumption or wealth—more than other groups. Table O.1 shows that 16 percent of students in faith-inspired schools come from households in the bottom quintile of the distribution of welfare, versus 25.3 percent from the top quintile (each quintile accounts for 20 percent of the population). Thus, faith-inspired Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 4 Overview Table O.1  Shares of Students in Each Type of School by Welfare Quintile percent (average across the countries) Welfare quintiles Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Primary schools Public 21.7 21.8 21.6 19.9 15.0 Faith-inspired 16.0 17.7 19.5 21.5 25.3 Secular 8.5 11.8 14.2 21.6 43.9 Total 20.0 20.7 20.8 20.3 18.2 Secondary schools Public 12.3 15.7 19.0 23.8 29.2 Faith-inspired 10.4 10.9 20.7 23.1 34.9 Private secular 4.5 8.2 13.2 19.1 54.9 Total 11.2 14.6 18.1 23.3 32.8 Source: Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. schools tend to serve the poor slightly less than the better off. This is not surprising because the cost of education is often high for the poor, resulting in lower demand than among the better-off, especially when cost recovery is prevalent as is the case with faith-inspired schools that do not benefit from public funding. Finding #3: Faith-inspired schools tend to reach the poor slightly less than pub- lic schools, but much more than private secular schools. How do FISs compare to public facilities? The benefit incidence by quintile for FISs is less pro-poor than for public facilities, for both primary and secondary schools. Indeed, for public facilities 21.7 percent of children come from the ­ bottom quintile at the primary level, and the share is 12.3 percent at the second- ary level versus 10.4 percent for faith-inspired schools. On the other hand, as expected, the services provided by faith-inspired schools are less tilted towards better-off children than is the case for private secular schools, for which 43.9 percent of the students in primary schools and 54.9 percent of the students in secondary schools come from households belonging to the top quintile. Thus it is clear from table O.1 that faith-inspired schools serve the poor more than private secular schools, as also shown in figure O.2. Private Cost of Education The question of the extent to which FISs and private secular schools reach the poor is closely related to the cost for households of the services provided, and the amount of funding available to the schools. In some cases, FISs may benefit from special resources to make services more affordable for the poor, for example when they get support from congregations, whether these are locally based or located in developed countries, or from other organizations including government agencies. In the absence of such support, subsidies granted to the poor may require charging better-off patients more for the Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Overview 5 Figure O.2  Shares of Students in Private Primary School by Welfare Quintile a. Faith-inspired schools b. Private secular schools Q1 Q5 Q1 8.5 25% 16% Q2 11.8% Q2 Q5 18% 43.9% Q3 14.2% Q4 22% Q3 Q4 20% 21.6% Source: Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. Table O.2  Private Cost of Schooling per Child for Households US$ (average across the countries) Welfare quintiles Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 All Primary schools Public 4 5 6 9 18 7 Faith-inspired 8 14 17 28 54 26 Secular 16 27 39 50 144 84 Total 5 7 10 17 56 16 Secondary schools Public 26 35 45 60 95 55 Faith-inspired 64 64 53 91 141 94 Private secular 39 58 105 104 227 168 Total 27 41 52 70 133 74 Source: Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. ­ rovided to those groups, or relying on staffs who are willing to work services p at below market wages. Summary statistics for the average costs by type of provider are provided in table O.2 and figure O.3 on the basis of data for eight of the 16 countries where that information was available. These are yearly costs in US dollars for primary and secondary schooling. These are not the total costs paid by households—for example transport costs are not included, nor are costs for uniforms and textbooks for examples, but these are the costs paid to schools for the services received. Apart from fees, PTA (Parent-Teacher Associations) dues are included, as these tend to fund operating expenses. Finding #4: There are large differences in the private costs of education for households between providers, with faith-inspired schools costing more than public schools, but less than private secular schools. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 6 Overview Figure O.3  Average Private Cost of Schooling by Type of Provider US$ (average across the countries) 180 160 140 120 100 US, $ 80 60 40 20 0 Public Faith Secular Total Type of provider Primary Secondary Source: Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. There is a clear ranking in costs between the various types of providers, with public schools being much cheaper, especially at the primary level where many countries have abolished most fees. Faith-inspired schools are more costly than public schools, but less costly than private secular schools. Costs are higher for those in the top quintiles as compared to lower quintiles, as expected, and it can also be shown that costs are higher in urban than in rural areas. For example, table O.2 shows that the average cost of primary education is only US$7 in public schools, versus US$26 for faith-inspired schools and UD$84 for private secular schools. At the secondary level, the respective costs are US$55 in public schools, US$94 for faith-inspired schools, and UD$168 for private secular schools. Satisfaction In 7 of the 16 countries, data are available on satisfaction rates with the educa- tion services provided by various providers. Households are asked whether they have any complaints with the education received by children, and the absence of complaints is a measure of satisfaction. The main results are provided in table O.3 and figure O.4. FISs enjoy higher satisfaction rates than public schools. For example, for the population as a whole, the satisfaction rate among FISs is on average 16 points higher for primary schools than in public schools, and 15 points higher for secondary schools. Private secular schools fare even slightly better, especially at the primary level. Satisfaction rates with faith-inspired schools tend however to be much lower in the bottom quintiles than in the top quintiles, suggesting a differentiation between various types of faith-inspired schools, some of which may be serving Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Overview 7 Table O.3  Satisfaction Rates with the Various Types of Schools percent (average across the countries) Welfare quintiles Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 All Primary schools Public 52 54 56 59 64 57 Faith-inspired 52 67 73 73 80 73 Secular 68 66 72 81 87 82 Total 53 56 59 63 72 61 Secondary schools Public 60 60 60 59 63 61 Faith-inspired 47 61 76 72 80 76 Private secular 68 66 69 66 82 77 Total 60 60 62 61 69 64 Source: Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. Figure O.4  Satisfaction Rates with the Schooling Received percent (average across the countries) 100 90 80 70 60 Percent 50 40 30 20 10 0 Public Faith-inspired Private secular Type of provider Primary Secondary Source: Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. the very poor and others not (the gaps in satisfaction rates are smaller for public and private secular schools). Finding #5: Private secular and faith-inspired schools have substantially higher satisfaction rates among parents than public schools. What are the main reasons for nonsatisfaction? The questionnaires typically identify as potential reasons a lack of books/supplies, poor teaching, a lack of teachers, facilities in bad condition, overcrowding, a lack of furniture, and other problems. In a few countries, cost is also included as a potential reason Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 8 Overview for nonsatisfaction, but not in most. At the primary level, the lack of books and supplies is often the main reason for nonsatisfaction. Overcrowding and a lack of teachers are also mentioned, as well as many of the other problems. In secondary schools, the lack of books/supplies also comes first in most countries, but the lack of teachers comes up more often as a reason for nonsatisfaction. It is important however to emphasize that the fact that the cost of schooling is not a major complaint in the statistics presented above does not mean that it is not an issue. The questions on satisfaction are asked to parents who have children in school—among parents who have children of school age not in school, it can be shown that cost is often the main, or at least a key reason for not being in school or dropping out. Reasons for Choosing Specific Schools Additional data were collected in two countries through focus groups and in- depth interviews to better understand the reasons why some parents chose to send their children to faith-inspired schools (see box O.2 for the methodology). Box O.2  Data Sources—Qualitative Work Qualitative data were collected by the World Bank between April and June 2010 in Ghana and Burkina Faso. These data were collected through interviews with parents, head teach- ers, and school principals for a total of eight or nine schools per country in one urban and one rural location in each of the two countries. The schools were selected with inputs from district education officials, but the main criterion was the requirement that there should be both public and faith-inspired schools in the areas where the qualitative work was con- ducted. The areas had to have both Christian and Islamic schools apart from public schools. A semi-structured questionnaire was used to interview individuals sending their children to the schools. Each interview took from one hour to one hour and a half, and focused in large part on the perceptions of the schools and the reasons that led individuals to choose one school versus another. Both responses to open-ended questions and closed questions will be used in the analysis. In the case of closed questions, quantitative statistics were esti- mated in percentage terms from those interviews, but it must be emphasized that the ­ sample is small in both countries. A separate semi-structured questionnaire was also administered to the school principals and administrators as well as to a few teachers. A few ­ additional interviews were conducted with key informants, such as officials from the Minis- tries of Education. In Ghana among those sending their children to Christian schools, faith is a key motivation for half (50.0 percent) of the parents (see table O.4). The share is even higher at 75.0 percent for parents sending their children to Islamic schools (37.5 percent of parents in Islamic schools also mentioned that learning Arabic was important). In addition to the role of faith and values, quality also mattered, Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Overview 9 Table O.4  Main Reasons for Choosing the School, Qualitative Field Work, 2010 percent Islamic schools Christian schools Secular schools Ghana Location 20.8 16.7 37.5 Religion 75.0 50.0 6.3 Morals, values — 29.2 — Learn Arabic 37.5 — — Learn English 4.2 — — Teacher quality 4.2 33.3 25.0 Academics 4.2 16.7 25.0 Future schooling/job 4.2 4.2 — Know the school 16.7 16.7 18.8 Low or no fees 4.2 — 31.3 Low cost books 4.2 — — Curriculum 29.2 4.2 — Burkina Faso Location 38.7 33.3 70.0 Religion 83.9 33.3 — Morals, values 35.5 36.7 — Learn Arabic 29.0 — — Learn French 25.8 — 3.3 Teacher quality 12.9 46.7 10.0 Academics 25.8 76.7 46.7 Future schooling/job 9.7 6.7 16.7 Know the school — 6.7 13.3 Low or no fees — — 30.0 No proselytizing — — 16.7 Sources: Shojo and Wodon 2013; Gemignani and Wodon 2013. Note: Multiple answers allowed. — = not available. especially for parents relying on Christian schools. For some of these parents, qual- ity issues did lead to a change in school for their children. Finding #6: Faith and values are key reasons why some parents chose faith- inspired schools, with quality also playing a role especially for the choice of Christian schools. Similar results were obtained in Burkina Faso where parents at Christian schools said that they chose their school for its academic and teacher quality (76.7 percent and 46.7 percent, respectively). By contrast, respondents in Islamic schools more often said that their choice of school was largely based on the opportunity for their children to receive a religious education (83.9 percent), with smaller numbers list- ing academic or teacher quality (25.8 percent and 12.9 percent respectively). In public schools, location was a deciding factor for 70 percent of parents, followed by academic quality (46.7 percent) and the lack of school fees (30.0 percent). Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 10 Overview Education on moral values was listed as a reason for school choice by about a third of parents in Islamic and Christian schools, but by no parents in public schools (see box O.3 for examples of brief testimonies by parents in FISs). Box O.3  Example of Testimonies by Parents “The school is strict and disciplines the children. Apart from academic subjects, Christian values are instilled in the children, and that makes them obedient.” (Parent at a public Christian school) “When the children complete this type of school, they will be knowledgeable in both aca- demic subjects and Islamic studies.” (Parent at a private Islamic school) The importance of religion also emerges from comments made by parents: “Because this school is an Islamic school, they teach Arabic and English. That is why I prefer this school to secular schools” (Parent at a public Islamic school); “Children in the other schools are not as disciplined like the children here. The fear of the Lord is taught and also the church supports us. I want my children to be brought up in the Christian faith” (Parent at a private Christian school). Another question was asked about the advantages of the school chosen by parents. In both countries faith and values came again strongly as key advan- tages among those sending their children to Christian and Islamic schools. Overall, faith clearly matters for the choice of a faith-inspired school, and this appears to be especially the case for Islamic schools. Performance The study also reports on a few measures of comparative performance, again with a focus on Ghana and Burkina Faso. The data are however weaker, so conclusions are tentative. In both countries, students appear to do slightly better in private schools than in public schools. In Ghana for example, 65 percent of students in public schools can read in English, and 59 percent can write in English. The corre- sponding shares in faith-inspired schools are 71 percent and 63 percent, and they are even higher in private secular schools at 89 percent and 83 percent. Similarly, the share of students who can do a written calculation is lower in public schools, at 90 percent, than in faith-inspired and private secular schools, at 92 percent and 96 percent respectively. Within faith-inspired schools, some differences are also observed. In the Burkina Faso for example, students in Christian schools tend to do better than students in Islamic schools. Yet all these results need to be interpreted with caution. In the case of Ghana, when relying on regression analysis, students in private secular schools continue to do better than students in public schools, but this is not the case anymore for students in faith-inspired school, especially in rural areas. Finding #7: There is tentative evidence that students in faith-inspired schools, and especially those in private secular schools, perform better than students in public schools, but more research is needed in this area. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Overview 11 Conclusion Despite the important role of faith-inspired and private secular schools in educa- tion service delivery in Africa, limited systematic evidence is available today on their market share, reach to the poor, cost, and satisfaction among users, in com- parison with public schools. This study aimed to close some of that knowledge gap. Six main findings emerge from the analysis: 1. The average market share for faith-inspired schools is 10–15 percent, and that for private secular schools is of a similar order of magnitude. 2. On average, faith-inspired schools do not reach the poor more than other groups; they also do not reach the poor more than public schools, but they do reach the poor significantly more than private secular schools. 3. The cost for households of faith-inspired schools is higher than that of public schools, possibly because of lack of public funding, but lower than that of pri- vate secular schools. 4. Faith-inspired and private secular schools have higher satisfaction rates among parents than public schools. 5. Parents using faith-inspired schools place a strong emphasis on religious edu- cation and moral values. 6. Students in faith-inspired and private schools perform better than those in public schools, but this may be due in part to self-selection. This study was devoted to a basic diagnostic of the role of private schools in edu- cation in Africa. What are some of the important areas for further research? A first priority is to conduct research on how to deal with the risk of duplica- tion of efforts and the lack of harmonization between education providers. To minimize such risks, detailed pictures of the service delivery landscape at both the local and national levels are needed. It is also important to promote more public- private partnerships between FISs and governments. A second priority is to better understand the constraints in private schools, and especially the faith-inspired schools that serve the poor operate, the chal- lenges they face, and the opportunities they offer. How can faith-inspired schools serve the poor when the sources of revenues available to them are limited, which raises cost recovery from households? How can these schools maintain their distinctive vision and culture while being progressively more integrated into national education systems? How can the capacity of the schools to evaluate their interventions, as well as to assess the extent to which they reach the poor, be expanded? A third sets of questions, not discussed in this study, relates to the impact of faith on behaviors, not only as it relates to the choice of service provider, but also more generally. In many areas such as child marriage, which has implications for education outcomes, faith-related practices and cultural traditions play an impor- tant role, underscoring the potential of engaging religious and traditional leaders as well as faith-inspired schools in efforts to eradicate such practices. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 12 Overview Given that the market share of FISs may be smaller than many had thought, and that their reach to the poor is also limited even if their contribution should not be understated, it could very well be that one of the more important roles that faith and values play in education is related to their impact on a wide range of behaviors, and not only service delivery. Questions related to faith and behav- iors that affect education and other human development outcomes are often more difficult to understand, and also more difficult to influence through govern- ment policies than issues related directly to service delivery, but certainly not less important to consider. In addition, better understanding of why many faith-inspired schools seem to provide a good-quality education despite limited budgets could also be beneficial for advancing the “learning for all” agenda. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 CHAPTER 1 Introduction Within the context of Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), donors and governments in developing countries have made improvements in human devel- opment a key priority. Public sector service providers continue to have a leading role in efforts to improve education outcomes, but private providers, including faith-inspired schools (FISs), may also contribute. Given that many developing countries may miss the education targets of the MDGs, it is all the more impor- tant for donors as well as national and local governments to recognize the role played by FISs, and where appropriate to support them in their service delivery activities, especially when they reach the poor. Unfortunately, empirical assess- ments of the role that FISs have played or could play in improving education outcomes and providing services have not been conducted to-date. Such assess- ments are especially needed at the national and local levels where development policies and interventions are negotiated and implemented. Both the supply and demand sides of service delivery in education deserve attention. First, on the supply side of service delivery, it is often argued that FISs provide a large share of education services, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa, and that their services are better targeted to the poor, more cost effective, and of higher quality than those of other providers. These assertions, if correct, could have major implications for policy, since governments (as well as donors) would then be more inclined to support FISs in their activities. Unfortunately, the evi- dence to back up such statements remains rather limited and is often contentious. Second, on the demand side of service delivery, it is often argued that faith plays an important role in decisions made by individuals and households about education. Examples include whether parents send girls to school and the types of schools chosen. In this study, the focus is on the satisfaction of the users of the services provided by FISs, and why parents choose to use faith-inspired, other private, or public facilities for their education needs. Again the data are limited— or not yet properly analyzed and interpreted—on the satisfaction of households with the services provided by various providers, and on the preferences that affect the choice of providers by households. For example, is faith a key factor in Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   13 14 Introduction the choice of service provider, and is the importance of preferences related to faith similar for Muslims and Christians? Because of limited analysis on those issues, faith and more generally values are typically not (specifically) taken into account when designing development interventions. The purpose of the study is to provide an empirical assessment of the role that FISs play in the supply of Education services in Sub-Saharan Africa, with more detailed work conducted for Ghana and Burkina Faso. In what follows, the next two chapters are meant to provide background for the rest of the study. Chapter 2 provides information on the conceptual framework that informs the study. Chapter 3 describes the methodology and data used for the study, with a focus on nationally representative household surveys that provide new evidence on the market share, reach to the poor, cost, and performance of FISs in compari- son with other service providers. The methodology for the collection of addi- tional data, including qualitative fieldwork conducted in Ghana and Burkina Faso, is also described. The next three chapters are devoted to an assessment of the market share and reach to the poor of FISs, as well as their cost for households. Chapter 4 deals with the market share debate. It is often claimed that FISs account for 40 percent or more of service provision in African countries, but the evidence on which such claims are based is thin. The chapter presents new sets of estimates of the role of FISs based on national household surveys. Next, chapter 5 looks at whether FISs reach the poor in priority when provid- ing services, and at whether they make special efforts to do so. Once again the perception that FISs reach the poor in priority is not necessarily confirmed by the data from household surveys. On average FISs are not serving the poor more in absolute terms, nor are they serving the poor proportionately more than public facilities, even if they often appear to make special efforts to do so. They do, on the other hand, serve the poor substantially more than secular private providers, and many FISs appear to make efforts to reach the poor and other vulnerable groups. Chapter 6 considers the cost of the education services provided by FISs. In the absence of support from the state, or in cases where lower levels of support are received by FISs than by public facilities, the need for FISs to achieve cost recov- ery may make their services less affordable for the poor. At the same time, FISs may be able to tap into other sources of funding, especially from congregations and other religious groups nationally or abroad. Chapter 6 relies on various sources of data to assess the private cost of education for households. The last chapter is more focused on the demand for the services provided by FISs. It looks at the satisfaction of users with various types of facilities and the reasons why some individual and households use the services provided by FISs. Limited analysis is also conducted on the performance of FISs. The analysis sug- gests that FISs tend to provide services of better quality than public providers, at least as measured through satisfaction rates among users, with the higher level of satisfaction with FISs related in part to better service and the fact that FISs do place an emphasis on religion and values in the education provided to children. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Introduction 15 As to good data on performance for FISs, it is hard to come by. But subjective assessments of literacy and numeracy are available in the household surveys and can thus be used. The evidence does not suggest that students in faith-inspired schools as a whole do better than students in public schools, while students in private secular schools appear to be doing slightly better, but this specific evi- dence is provided for only one country, so that is should not be generalized. Overall, it is hoped that the study provides the first comprehensive empirical analysis of the role that FISs play in efforts towards providing education services in Sub-Saharan Africa, with more details for the cases studies devoted to Ghana and Burkina Faso. It is also hoped that the analysis is innovative by relying on both nationally representative household surveys that have not yet been used for this purpose and qualitative fieldwork. It is finally hoped that the study will be of interest to a wide range of readers, including the staff of FISs, policy makers, and development practitioners working for local and national governments as well as donors and all those who are interested in what is often referred to as “faith in action.” Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 CHAPTER 2 Motivation and Background Introduction This study aims to contribute to better empirical evidence and knowledge about the contribution of faith-inspired schools (FISs) to service delivery in education in Sub-Saharan Africa, with additional work for two country studies in Ghana and Burkina Faso. Part of the debate about the role of FISs in service delivery has been framed within the broader discussion on markets and public-private partnerships, at least in the economics literature. As noted by Barrera-Osorio et al. (2009b), part of this literature compares the performance of private and public schools. Even if this is not always the case, there is some evidence that private schools, including faith-inspired schools, may provide better services and achieve better education outcomes than public schools (on this topic, see among others Allcott and Ortega 2009; Altonji et al. 2005; Asadullah et al. 2009; Cox and Jimenez 1990; Evans and Schwab 1995; González and Arévalo 2005; Hoxby 1994; Hsieh and Urquiola 2006; Wodon and Ying 2009; Parra Osorio and Wodon 2011). Another strand in the literature focuses on the reasons that could explain the gains often associated with private schools, including faith-inspired schools (Epple and Romano 1998; LaRocque and Patrinos 2006; Nechyba 2000; Savas 2000). First, private schools may introduce competition in the education sector and thereby raise overall quality. Second, private providers may have more flex- ibility than public providers in the management of the schools. Third, to the extent that private providers of education are competitively selected, better providers would emerge in the private as opposed to the public sphere. Fourth, risk-sharing between the government and the private sector may also lead to better overall provision. Yet much of the evidence on the quality of faith-inspired schools has been obtained from high- (and sometimes middle-) income countries, and many of the arguments about the benefits of private provision in education have been made principally in the context of developed countries. While these arguments also hold to some extent for developing countries, some differences must be pointed out. First, in many countries in Africa, especially in rural areas where the majority of the population still lives, many households may not have many Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   17 18 Motivation and Background choices with regards to where to send their children to school, so that competi- tion and risk sharing are likely to be more limited than in developed countries. Education provision in those areas is also often not profitable, so that there are limited incentives for competitive selection between private providers, even though some competition does take place. Finally, many FISs tend to rely at least in part on public funding, which also implies that flexibility may be limited, for example for the design of the curriculum that is taught, or in the ability of faith- inspired schools to hire and fire teachers. This suggests that the benefits from the contribution of private and faith- inspired schools identified in the economics literature—such as competition, flexibility, selection, and risk-sharing—may perhaps not materialize as much in poor African countries as they may in developed countries. The potential benefits from faith-inspired schools for students may instead come more from the special dedication to their mission that these providers often have. Still, this does not mean that the basic insights from the economics literature, and what is often referred to as rational choice theory in the religious studies literature (see appendix A) —namely that individuals practice their faith in vari- ous areas of their life taking into account the benefits and costs of doing so—do not apply when discussing the supply of education services by FISs, or the demand for such services by households. These services are provided in a market that is often at least somewhat competitive, with different schools facilities acces- sible to households. At the local level, where there is a faith-inspired facility, there is often also a public facility nearby, and (less often) a private secular facil- ity. Individuals are often willing to travel some distance to attend a certain school when the school is perceived to provide services of higher quality. This means that even if in a given village, there may be only one school, competition may be there through another facility located in a nearby village. Furthermore, as shown in chapter 5 and contrary to popular belief, most FISs do not necessarily serve mostly the poor in remote rural areas. Backiny-Yetna and Wodon (2009a) suggest for example that in Cameroon, faith-inspired schools tend to cater to a relatively well-off and mostly urban clientele. What adds to competitive pressures at the local level is the fact that education services are consumed for a price—even if special efforts are made by FISs to make their services affordable, and in some cases even free, for the poor. Significant cost recovery is often requested from clients by service providers through various types of fees, and this takes place whether one considers public, faith-inspired, or private secular providers. In geographic areas where different types of providers are present, price differentiation between providers is observed, which affects where households choose to put their children in school. Competition between providers is based in part on prices, but also on quality and perceptions of quality. As already mentioned, it is often argued that FISs provide services of better quality than the public sector, and this study will pro- vide some empirical evidence to that effect. At the same time, FISs may perhaps not provide the best services available, simply because of the financial constraints they face. When FISs aim to serve the poor, they tend not to charge as much as Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Motivation and Background 19 private secular providers. Higher levels of cost recovery from users then gives an advantage to private secular providers in providing education services that may be of higher quality than those provided by FISs, and thereby in achieving higher performance. Mentioning that FISs provide services in a market place that is competitive with competition taking place among others through prices and quality, so that FISs must take into account the various costs and benefits of the options available to them, is stating the obvious. Does this mean that on the supply side faith plays no role in what FISs chose to do? Or that on the demand side faith does not matter in individual decisions related to education? Not at all: faith does matters, whether one considers the supply of services (faith motivates many of those who work for FISs and the decisions made by FIS managers) or the demand for ser- vices (faith influences those using the services provided). On the supply side, faith is often at the core of the ethos of FISs and their workers, which can lead FISs to behave differently from other (especially for- profit) providers. An example of this is provided by Reinikka and Svensson (2010) in their work on Uganda. The authors use a change in financing of not- for-profit healthcare providers through untied government grants to test two theories of organizational behavior. The first theory postulates that not-for-profit providers are intrinsically motivated to serve the poor and will therefore use new resources to expand their services or cut the cost of these services. The second theory postulates that not-for-profit providers are captured by their managers or workers and behave like for-profit actors. Although they may not appropriate profits, they would tend to use untied grants to raise the salaries of their staff or provide them with other benefits that would not directly serve the poor. The authors’ empirical results suggest that the first altruistic theory is validated by the data, and that the results matter in the sense that this altruistic behavior makes a difference for the poor. On the demand side as well, faith may play an important, and in some cases decisive, role, given the importance of faith in many people’s lives in the develop- ing world (Tsimpo and Wodon 2013a). A few examples help in illustrating how this may happen. First, faith may influence the choice of service provider by individuals and households. One of the findings of this study is that faith does play a key role for at least part of the population when choosing an education provider. This is because the values taught at school—and in the case of Muslims the inclusion of Islamic studies in the curriculum—are very important for some parents. As a second example, consider the role that faith plays in behaviors that in turn affect the demand for service delivery. If within a specific faith tradition, girls do not tend to go to school after a certain age, say in part because of early marriages, this then affects the demand for schooling in that tradition. Because faith does matter in many people’s life, it does influence the choices made by individuals and households, which in turn may have direct or indirect implica- tions for service delivery. In terms of conceptual framework on those issues, a standard reference for a synthesis of recent research on service delivery in developing countries, especially Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 20 Motivation and Background for the poor, is the World Development Report entitled Making Services Work for Poor People (World Bank 2004). The framework used in that report focuses on four sets of actors: citizens/clients who use services, politicians and policy makers who regulate national service delivery systems and manage networks of public providers, organizational providers—the public and private entities or facilities that provide services, and, finally, frontline professionals such as teachers who deliver the services. The emphasis throughout the report is on accountability, defined as a relationship among two or more sets of actors that has five main features, namely delegation, finance, performance, information about perfor- mance, and enforceability. Today much of the research on service delivery is focused on how to make accountability relationships work, so that better services are provided at an affordable cost to the poor. For example, which incentives work best for teachers to actually show up in class? Or what are the features of successful public-private partnerships and contractual arrangements for the delivery of services? In eco- nomics and more generally in the realm of program evaluation, much of the research on service delivery is rather sophisticated. Randomization is often con- sidered as the gold standard for assessing the impact of any given intervention or program, and when this is not feasible, complex econometric methodologies are used to tease out impacts. This level of sophistication is in part the result of the fact that many of the more basic questions, in terms of measuring access to ser- vices, targeting to the poor, cost, and performance have been answered, at least as they pertain to public service delivery. In this study, some of the sections will rely on econometric or experimental techniques, but most of the analysis will not, simply because many of the basic questions on the role of FISs in service delivery still have not been answered. This study will provide econometric results when appropriate. But because most of the work conducted on service delivery has not considered the role of faith explicitly, the study will often give substantial space to establishing basic stylized facts, as opposed to conducting more advanced research on specific program interventions or alternative accountability mechanisms. It is hoped that by establishing basic styl- ized facts more firmly, and by showing that there are data available to conduct some of the more sophisticated work, the study will encourage others to follow suit. Comparative Advantage of Faith-Inspired Institutions The purpose of this study is to assess empirically whether what is often said about the market share, reach to the poor, cost, and quality of FISs in service delivery in Africa is actually correct. A key aspect of what is said about FISs is that they may have a comparative advantage in the delivery of certain services, but that they may also suffer from comparative disadvantages in other areas. Such comparative advantages and weaknesses are important, given that individu- als and households choose their service providers depending on a range of factors, including costs, quality, and faith-specific considerations. As to the administrators and staff of FISs, they also consider various factors—including their perceived Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Motivation and Background 21 comparative advantages and weaknesses—in making decisions about the range and types of services that they should provide. These decisions by both house- holds and by FISs should then in turn be taken into account by governments and line ministries when considering various education policies or programs. In this broad context, there are at least two ways of thinking of the compara- tive advantage of FISs. A first approach consists in considering the faith orienta- tion of FISs as a specific comparative advantage in and of itself, at least towards some segments of the population. For example, models can be constructed, and hypotheses can be tested, to assess whether households who tend to be more religious favor specific types of schools, so that their children receive a specific type of education. An illustration of such models is presented in appendix A based on a paper by Cohen-Zada and Sander (2008). Another way to think of the potential comparative advantages and disadvan- tages of FISs is to look at secular attributes of service delivery, and to compare FISs to other providers along those attributes. With specific reference to healthcare services in Sub-Saharan Africa, Lipsky (2011) provides a review of the literature on such comparative advantages of FISs as compared to nongovernmental organi- zations (NGOs) (for a broader review of the literature on religion and develop- ment, see Deneulin and Rakodi (2011)).1 While this is not the only such review of the literature, and while it focuses on healthcare as opposed to education, it is handy in the way that it synthesizes much of the evidence to-date, and it is likely that much of what Lipsky attributes as specific characteristics of FISs or NGOs in the case of healthcare services could also be attributed to similar organizations involved in education services. In order to make more precise what is done in this study and what is not done in comparison to the literature, and in order to com- pare some of the results of this study with the literature, it is useful to review Lipsky’s findings and those of this study. Table 2.1 provides the list of strengths and weaknesses identified by Lipsky for FISs and NGOs. The table also provides a brief assessment of the findings of this study, where the comparison is not between FISs and NGOs, but between FISs, public providers, and private secular providers, most of which are for-profit. The ratings provided for FISs and NGOs in the first two columns are those given by Lipsky, and the ratings in the next three columns are based on this study. The top rating is a “3,” which suggests that FISs or NGOs are very likely to have a com- parative advantage (or a weakness) in any given area. A rating of “2” suggests that FISs or NGOs are likely to benefit from a comparative advantage. A rating of “1” suggests a lower but still positive likelihood of this being the case. A rating of “0” suggests no comparative advantage (or no weakness in an area).The symbol “—” suggests that a specific aspect is not analyzed in the review by Lipsky or in this study. In a nutshell, table 2.1 provides an overview of what the literature says about the comparative advantage of FISs, and what is found in this study. At least three points can be made about table 2.1. First, in terms of scope, there are differences in the topics considered in the broader literature on ser- vice delivery by FISs and those covered here. Here the focus is on a few spe- cific aspects of service delivery—namely the assessment of the market share, Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 22 Motivation and Background Table 2.1  Potential Comparative Advantages and Weaknesses of FISs Lipsky This study Private NGOs FISs FISs Public secular Comparative advantage Service delivery Market share — — 1 3 2 Reach to the poor — — 2 2 1 Low cost of services for the poor — — 2 3 1 Deliver quality services 1 1 2 1 3 Differentiated service provision — — 3 1 2 Organizational traits Moral and ethical standing 1 2 3 1 — Understanding of local context 1 3 2 2 — Increased flexibility 1 3 — — — Increased transparency and accountability 1 0 — — — Beneficiary empowerment Build constituency 1 1 — — — Help communities form their own representative bodies 1 0 — — — Connect local communities with higher authorities 1 0 — — — Foster joint learning 1 1 — — — Other roles Speaks on behalf of disenfranchised 1 1 — — — Mobilize energy and resources 1 3 1 2 2 Provide feedback to donors and government 1 0 2 3 1 Contribute to consensus building 1 1 — — — Comparative weaknesses Amateurism 1 2 1 1 1 Particularism 1 2 1 1 1 Paternalism 1 2 — — — Insufficiency 1 1 — — — Source: Adapted and expanded from Lipsky 2011. Note: In Lipsky, symbols are used instead of ratings of 0–3, but the message is the same. A higher value implies a higher likelihood of having a comparative advantage or weakness. NGOs = nongovernmental organizations; FISs = faith-inspired schools; — = not available. reach to the poor, cost and funding, and user satisfaction rates of FISs, as well as the reasons why households choose FISs. The treatment of many of those topics is hopefully more thorough in this study than in the existing literature, and this is the contribution of the study. Yet one should be aware that the broader literature considers other issues, such as the organizational traits of FISs, the extent to which they succeed in empowering their beneficiaries, and some other roles they may play which are only briefly discussed here. While some of the findings in this study have relevance for some of these other ques- tions, such as the moral and ethical standing of FISs, their understanding of the local context, or their dialogue with government, the scope of this study is Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Motivation and Background 23 necessarily limited, with many interesting questions not debated, or at least not discussed in-depth. Second, in terms of findings on comparative advantages, Lipsky suggests that the main comparative advantage of FISs is their moral and ethical standing with local populations, which helps in raising funds, recruiting staffs and volunteers, and understanding the local context, and in turn leads to flexibility in the way they operate. It is unclear on the other hand whether FISs are better than NGOs in other areas, such as speaking on behalf of the disenfranchised, contributing to consensus building and connecting communities with higher authorities, or delivering quality services. This study suggests similar findings, but also with some differences. In terms of areas not covered by Lipsky in detail, this study suggests that FISs have a smaller market share than is often believed, that they reach the poor about to the same extent as the public sector does, and that they tend to be more expensive for households. In comparison to private secular providers, FISs do reach the poor more and at lower cost. In terms of common areas of focus, one apparent difference between Lipsky’s conclusions and this study’s findings relates to the quality of the services provided. Lipsky rates both FISs and NGOs as having only a somewhat likely comparative advantage in that area. While rec- ognizing heterogeneity in the quality of services provided by different FISs, this study suggests a strong comparative advantage for FISs, at least as measured through user satisfaction among FISs and the reasons for choosing those facilities. For education the fact that faith-inspired schools give a larger place to faith and values is appreciated by parents relying on their services (this is why the area of “differentiation” was added in table 2.1). It could be that the moral and ethical standing of FISs is indeed at the source of these differences in user satisfaction. Clearly this is a key comparative advantage for schools when parents care about values. But it may also be that higher user satisfaction with FISs is related to a tradition of service that is not directly the result of the FISs’ moral and ethical standing. While this study will not venture into what exactly is the reason for the higher level of satisfaction among users of FISs, it does suggest a comparative advantage there. Third, in terms of potential weaknesses, Lipsky suggests that FISs may be more at risk of amateurism, particularism, and paternalism than NGOs, that they may be less transparent and accountable than NGOs, and that they have fewer interactions with donors and governments. In this study there is little evidence of amateurism, particularism (in terms of relying on religion to select those who are served, or in terms of whether FISs proselytize), and paternalism on the part of FISs, and the FISs that are being reviewed appear to be relatively transparent and accountable. Many are also interacting with governments. This difference in find- ings may be related in part to differences in focus between Lipsky’s review and this study. While Lipsky considers a wider set of FISs, this study focuses on school-based providers. Now, one should not try to infer too much from table 2.1 because it only provides a very broad brush summary of some of the findings in Lipsky’s review Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 24 Motivation and Background of the literature and in this study. But the table hopefully helps to locate what this study focuses on within the literature on FISs in Sub-Saharan Africa, and in showing how differences in assessments can be made depending on the evidence at hand and the set of comparators used. Combination of Cross-Country and Country-Specific Work This study considers Sub-Saharan Africa as a whole, but additional work is done on two countries—Ghana and Burkina Faso. The basic idea is that looking in more details at a few case studies helps in better understanding the role that FISs have in service delivery in a specific country context, beyond the provision of statistics for Africa as a whole, or at least the countries where the analysis can be conducted. Why were Ghana and Burkina Faso chosen for the more detailed work? The reasons for this choice were both strategic and opportunistic. From a strategic point of view, three main reasons led to the choice of Ghana and Burkina Faso as case studies. The first reason is the fact that both countries are religiously diverse, with Christian, Muslim, and traditionalist populations. While Ghana is a majority Christian country, Burkina Faso is a majority Muslim country. Looking at two religiously diverse countries allows for potentially inter- esting comparisons between faith traditions. On the supply side of service deliv- ery, is the role of Christian and Muslim FISs different, both in terms of the scope of their activities and their characteristics? On the demand side, is the impact of faith on the demand for services by FISs different for Christian and Muslim populations? While for most of this study, the data do not permit an exploration of diversity within the Christian and Muslim traditions, comparisons between these two traditions do reveal interesting differences. The second reason behind the choice of Ghana and Burkina Faso is that it also provides for interesting comparisons between societies that have had different colonial experiences. Ghana was a British colony, and Burkina Faso a French one. Besides differences in language and culture, these colonial histories may have contributed to differences in the role that FISs play in health and education sys- tems today. The French model of state governance, which tends to be centralized, led in former colonies to the creation of strong public delivery systems for educa- tion (and healthcare), which left less space for private service delivery, including by FISs. By contrast, under the more decentralized British system, FISs were able to expand more easily, which led in some cases to more significant market shares. Considering both one English- and one French-speaking country in this study thus helps to have a more balanced view of the role of FISs in service delivery in Sub-Saharan Africa, given heterogeneity in such roles between countries. Finally, Ghana and Burkina Faso are at different stages of their development, which is the third strategic reason that led to the choice of these two countries for the study. Ghana has made great progress towards many of the Millennium Development Goal (MDGs), including by reducing the share of its population in poverty by almost half between the early 1990s and 2005/06 (Coulombe and Wodon 2007). Progress towards poverty reduction has also been accomplished Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Motivation and Background 25 in Burkina Faso, but not as rapidly (Nouve et al. 2009, 2010).Education out- comes are also better in Ghana than in Burkina Faso. In terms of levels of gross domestic product (GDP) per capita, while Ghana recently reached the lower- middle-income status, Burkina Faso is still a low-income country. World Bank estimates suggest a GDP per capita in Ghana of US$1190 under the Atlas method in 2009, while the corresponding figure for Burkina Faso is US$510 (the difference in PPP-adjusted GDP per capita is smaller). Diversity in faiths within each country, as well as diversity between the two countries in colonial experience, the role of FISs, and levels of development are the strategic reasons that led to the choice of Ghana and Burkina Faso as focus countries for this study. But there were also opportunistic reasons for this choice of countries, in terms of the availability of data. Indeed, as mentioned in chapter 3, substantial data are available on both countries, and especially in Ghana, in terms of individual or household surveys. Conclusion There has been a renewed interest in the role of faith and FISs in development among policy practitioners. The recognition that faith may affect development in multiple ways has led leading agencies such as the United Nations to step up their work in this area. Yet as these organizations are paying more attention to the so-called faith sector, it has also become evident that the evidence base on which policy makers could rely to guide their engagement with that sector remains weak. For example, existing estimates of the market share of FISs in service delivery in Africa are poorly documented, and may be higher than war- ranted.The objective of this study is to contribute a small step towards filling this empirical evidence and knowledge gap for Sub-Saharan Africa, with more detailed work for Ghana and Burkina Faso. Note 1. Lipsky (2011) uses the term faith-based organization (FBO) instead of FIS, but this does not matter much for the purpose of this study. On terminology, see the discussion in chapter 2. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 CHAPTER 3 Data and Methodology Introduction This chapter provides background information on the methodology and data used for this study. Pretty much the same approach is used in each of the chap- ters that follows, so that it is useful to start by describing what that approach or structure is. Essentially, the chapters start with an introduction that lays out the question at hand. Next, the second section of each chapter, typically entitled “cross-country evidence,” provides comparative information for up to 16 Sub- Saharan countries on the topic discussed in the chapter. Given that many issues or findings are country- and context-specific, the next section then provides additional evidence on the two countries selected for more in-depth case studies, namely Ghana and Burkina Faso. The material in that section tends to be differ- ent in each chapter, because it depends on the type of additional evidence that has been collected and analyzed—sometimes the additional evidence may be quantitative, sometimes it may be qualitative, and sometimes it may be com- bined. In some cases additional evidence is available for both Ghana and Burkina Faso, but in other cases the additional evidence may be available only for one country. In several cases, because of data availability, more additional evidence is available for Ghana than for Burkina Faso. This general structure for the chapters that follow guides the way in which the sections on data and methodology in this chapter are organized, with section 2 devoted to a brief discussion of the national surveys used for many countries (see also appendix C), and section 3 discussing more detailed qualitative data sources of data for Ghana and Burkina Faso. Beyond information on data sources, this chapter also discusses a few methodological issues that warrant attention. First, in section 4, questions are asked about the validity of the data at hand for the purpose of the study, as well as the techniques that are used for statistical and econometric work conducted with the surveys. For example, a first question is whether there is a serious risk of misidentification of faith-inspired schools (FISs) in the survey, and if so, what might be the consequences of such misidentifica- tion. Another question is how the poor are defined using the various household surveys, given that there are differences between various surveys on how this is Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   27 28 Data and Methodology done. More importantly, when comparing the cost of various providers for house- holds, or their performance and the satisfaction of users, it is useful to estimate econometric models that control for a range of household and possibly individual characteristics. How this is done while acknowledging the fact that the choice of the type of provider used itself depends on the same characteristics (the endoge- neity issue) is also discussed in section 4. Finally, section 5 emphasizes two limits in the scope of the study. Firstly, the study focuses on service delivery, as opposed to the broader set of issues related to faith and human development. Secondly, the study focuses for the most part on facilities-based services—that is, the services provided by schools, hospitals and clinics. This is related to a broader debate about what is meant by a FIS. The debate on the most appropriate term to be used—such as FIS, faith-based orga- nization (FBO), or other terms—is essentially brushed aside in this study, except when a discussion of terms is needed for the question at hand. Given the limits of the data being used, it is enough here to associate FISs to faith-inspired physi- cal facilities that provide education services. Without evidence in the household surveys on the role of other types of FISs, there is no need to enter into a debate on the terminology used in the literature to distinguish between various types of FISs. Thus, the lack of discussion of terminology should not be construed as a statement that terminology does not matter. The many terms used in the litera- ture point to a complex reality on the ground and a high degree of heterogeneity among FISs. But for this study, that debate on terminology and the many types of FISs matters less. Household Survey Data This study relies on both nationally representative household surveys and quali- tative fieldwork data—the reason for doing so is detailed in appendix. Consider first nationally representative household survey data. To-date, such surveys in which households are asked about the type of education facility they use when seeking care or providing an education for their children have not been drawn much into the discussion about the role of FISs in Africa. This is due in part to the fact that the surveys most frequently used for comparative work on human development, the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS), do not permit the identification of faith-inspired facilities separately from the other facilities used by households. The advantage of the DHS is that the surveys typically have the same questions, or at least very similar questions, asked in different countries. The surveys also are available after a short lag on a publicly accessible website. This makes conducting comparative empirical work across countries easier. Unfortunately, in the case of education, the standard questionnaire does not separate public and private facilities when asking where children are going to school. For this study, instead of using DHS data, the analysis is based on multipur- pose and nationally representative household surveys implemented in 16 African countries (see table 3.1; the 16 counties were selected from a larger pool for Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Data and Methodology 29 Table 3.1  Identification of FISs in the Education Modules of Selected Household Surveys Country Identification in the survey of FISs for education Benin (QUIBB 2003) No Burkina Faso (EACVM-QUIBB 2007) Yes Burundi (QUIBB 2006) Yes Cameroon (ECAM 2007) Yes Cape Verde (QUIBB 2007) No Chad (ECOSIT2 2003/04) No Cote d’Ivoire (ENV 2002) No Democratic Republic of Congo (123 survey 2004/05) Yes Gabon (EGEP-QUIBB 2005) No Ghana (CWIQ 2003) Yes Ghana (GLSS5 2005/06) Yes Guinea (ELEP-QUIBB 2007) No Kenya (KIHBS 2005) Yes Liberia (CWIQ 2007) No Malawi (HIS-2 2004) Yes Mali (ELIM-QUIBB 2006) Yes Niger (ENBC 2007) Yes Nigeria (LMS 2003/04) Yes ROC (ECOM-QUIBB 2005) Yes Rwanda (EICV 2001) No Senegal (ESPS 2005) Yes Sierra Leone (SLIHS 2003) Yes Swaziland (SHIES 2009) Yes Togo (QUIBB 2006) No Uganda (UNHS 2010) Yes Zambia (LCMS IV 2004) Yes Number of countries with identification 16 Source: Compiled by World Bank. See appendix C for more details on the surveys with identification. Note: FISs = faith-inspired schools. which data were available). The choice of the countries was in part opportunistic, in terms of the accessibility of the unit level data to the author. But it was also purposeful, in the sense that special efforts were made to have a broadly repre- sentative set of countries, including some of the larger ones such as Nigeria or the Democratic Republic of Congo. These multipurpose surveys are the surveys that are typically used for poverty measurement, as well as for preparing broader socioeconomic profiles, among others. But these surveys also have detailed edu- cation modules, which are used here. The education modules of the surveys typically ask whether children go to school, at what level, and in which type of school. Information is also sometimes available on the cost of education for households or individual household mem- bers, as well as on the satisfaction with the education received, and the reasons for nonsatisfaction. In addition, subjective perceptions on education outcomes, for example as to whether a child is able to read, write, or compute, are also Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 30 Data and Methodology sometimes available. In some cases, additional interesting information may be available, for example on petty corruption in Cameroon (see appendix H for a discussion). In the surveys for the 16 countries, with two surveys are available for Ghana, enough information is available on the type of provider relied upon for education in order to identify public, private secular and faith-inspired facilities, separately. This identification is at the core of the cross-country analysis presented in many of the chapters that follow, and it is also used for conducting more detailed work for Ghana and Burkina Faso. Details on the questions used to identify public providers, FISs, and private secular providers in the surveys/countries where the information is available are provided in appendix C. As noted in appendix C, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) have often been aggregated with faith-inspired providers for data reasons—that is, in a few countries the questionnaire simply lumps the two groups together, which in turn called for adding NGOs to FISs in the few cases where the two categories were separated in the questionnaires in order to maintain consistency. This does not affect the results substantially because the market share of NGOs is typically much smaller than that of faith-inspired providers, and it could also probably be argued that a nonnegligible share of the services provided by NGOs are actually faith inspired. Also, what is referred to as “secular providers” for simplicity con- sists of all providers that are neither faith inspired nor public. A change in ­ terminology from “private secular” providers to “other private providers” was considered, but not adopted, for ease of presentation. In all of the surveys identified with a “yes” in table 3.1, it is also feasible to assess which types of providers reach the poor. The poor will be defined in this study according to quintiles of well-being. In most cases, well-being is based on the level of consumption per capita or per equivalent adult of households, fol- lowing the methodology officially adopted for poverty measurement and welfare analysis in each of the countries. In the cases where data on consumption are not available, following standard practice well-being is defined using an index of household wealth obtained from a factorial analysis of the assets owned by households and the characteristics of their dwelling. Although official poverty estimates vary between countries, in most countries the bottom two or three quintiles can be considered as representing the poor. For some topics, only a subset of countries have the necessary information in the survey data to conduct the analysis. For example, questions on the satisfaction of households with the education services that they receive will be analyzed for only seven of the coun- tries in the sample, simply because that information is often lacking in most surveys. Beyond providing a list of countries in table 3.1 where household survey information is available on FISs, it is worth describing a bit more the surveys that will be used for Ghana and Burkina Faso, given the more detailed work to be carried with these surveys. In Ghana, two main surveys are used for the analysis of the role of FISs in service delivery. The first survey is the Ghana Living Standards Survey (GLSS5) implemented in 2005/06. This is a multipurpose Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Data and Methodology 31 household survey covering demography, health, education, employment, migra- tion, housing, agriculture activities, nonfarm self-employment, household expen- ditures, durable goods, and remittances and other incomes. The 2005/06 round of the survey was administrated to around 36,500 individuals belonging to 8,700 households. This nationwide sample is deemed representative at the level of the 10 regions. The second survey is the large sample 2003 Core Welfare Indicator Questionnaire (CWIQ) survey (49,000 households). This survey provides infor- mation mainly on demography, health, education, employment, housing, and assets, but it does not include a consumption module, neither does it have infor- mation on the cost of education services. The two surveys complement each other nicely. For example, the GLSS5 is useful for analyzing, say, the cost of schooling, something that is not feasible with the CWIQ. By contrast, the CWIQ has information on the satisfaction of households with the services received, and the reasons for nonsatisfaction, something that is not available in the GLSS5. The fact that two surveys are available for Ghana is also useful for triangulating fur- ther some of the information that emerges from the surveys, for example in terms of market share and reach to the poor. Both surveys were implemented independently of each other using different sampling frame. If they tend to yield similar results, this is then reassuring. In Burkina Faso, the main survey is the 2007 QUIBB, which stands for Questionnaire des Indicateurs de Base du Bien-être. This survey is very similar in design to the Ghana 2003 CWIQ, with essentially the same core modules on demography, health, education, employment, housing, and assets. The term QUIBB is actually a translation in French of the term “CWIQ,” and both the QUIBB and CWIQ surveys are implemented by national Statistical Offices with technical support from the same division at the World Bank. As for the Ghana 2003 CWIQ, the Burkina Faso 2007 QUIBB does not have consumption data. The Burkina Faso CWIQ is not a very large sample survey like the Ghana 2003 CWIQ—but it has a sample size of 8,500 households, which is large enough. Qualitative and Small Sample Data Collection In addition to the analysis of household surveys and administrative data, this study also relies on qualitative and small sample data collected by the World Bank between April and June 2010 in both Ghana and Burkina Faso (see appen- dix D for details). These data were collected through interviews with parents, head teachers, and school principals for a total of eight or nine schools per coun- try in one urban and one rural location in each of the two countries. The schools were selected with inputs from district education officials, but the main criteria was the requirement that there should be both public and faith-inspired schools in the areas where the qualitative work was conducted—this enabled individuals to discuss the advantages and disadvantages of different types of schools and explain the reasons why they chose specific schools facilities. Importantly, the selected areas had to have both Christian and Islamic schools, apart from public Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 32 Data and Methodology schools. The selection of the areas was done in such a way as to have at least two areas—one urban and one rural area—for each of the two countries. Note that in the case of Ghana, faith-inspired schools—whether Christian or Islamic—can be categorized in two groups: public and private faith-inspired schools. Public faith-inspired schools are government owned and funded. They were originally established by FISs but later absorbed into the public education system. Since these schools are now government schools, they follow the national curriculum. Yet, at most of these schools additional religious instruction is pro- vided beyond the core curriculum (for example, public Islamic schools teach religious topics and Arabic). By contrast, private faith-inspired schools were estab- lished by FISs and remain to-date for the most part without government support, as well as autonomous even if the curriculum at both the primary and secondary levels must follow accepted standards set by the Ghana Education Service. The information from what is referred to in this study as the qualitative of fieldwork data comes from these in-depth interviews and focus groups carried in Ghana and Burkina Faso. A semi-structured questionnaire was used to interview individuals sending their children to the schools. Each interview took from one hour to one hour and a half, and focused in large part on the perceptions of the schools and the reasons that led individuals to choose one school versus another. Both responses to open-ended questions and closed questions will be used in the analysis. In the case of closed questions, quantitative statistics will be presented in percentage terms from those interviews, but it must be emphasized that the sample is small in both countries. A separate semi-structured questionnaire was also administered to the school principals and administrators as well as to a few teachers.A few additional interviews were conducted with key informants, such as officials from the Ministries of Education. More details on the fieldwork data and its sample size, as well as the questionnaires, are provided in appendix D. Data Validity and Analysis Validity of Household Survey Data on Service Delivery A key contribution of this study consists in the systematic analysis of nationally representative household survey data to look at the role of FISs in education ser- vice provision. The advantage of household surveys is that their information can be used to not only obtain overall statistics, such as the market share of FISs in service delivery at the national level, but also statistics for various types of households, such as the market share of various providers for households belonging to different quintiles of well-being, from the poorest to the better off. Household surveys can also be used to look at marginal effects through econometric models—for example, it is feasible to look at the cost of attending a specific type of school controlling for individual and household characteristics that may also affect that cost. But before discussing econometric issues, it is important to discuss the validity of household survey data for this study. As mentioned earlier, the findings obtained from household surveys are not always corresponding to the “conventional wis- dom” on the role of FISs in service delivery in Sub-Saharan Africa. For example, Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Data and Methodology 33 estimates of the market share of FISs in education service delivery tend to be much lower using data from household surveys than is commonly assumed, at least in advocacy-focused networks. Does this mean that the estimates from household surveys are somehow biased, even if they are based on nationally rep- resentative surveys, or that alternatively the information obtained from other administrative data on facilities is flawed? An explanation for the much smaller market shares for FISs observed in household surveys could be that the identifica- tion of FISs by households in the surveys is flawed. It could be that households mistakenly identify facilities such as schools as belonging to the public sector, while the facilities are in fact faith inspired. This could happen for example if a school is publicly funded. There appears to be no clear evidence that this would indeed be the case, but if it were to be the case, it would be difficult to correct the existing data for potential issues of misidentification of FISs by households. What can be done though is to try to triangulate the results from a given survey with results from other surveys, and to look in more details at other sources of data, including administrative data, to see if the differences in results can be plausibly explained, as will be done in chapter 4. Consider now another but related question. Assume for the sake of the argu- ment that there may indeed be a bias, hopefully small, in the identification of FISs by households in household surveys, which would result in a lower market share for FISs in the surveys than is warranted. Is this likely to affect substantially other results, for example in terms of the analysis of whether FISs reach the poor or not, their cost in comparison to other facilities, the satisfaction of their users, or their performance? To a large extent, the position in this study is that this is not likely to be the case too much—these results will typically remain valid. To understand why this is likely to be the case, consider the specific question of whether FISs tend to reach the poor proportionately more than public provid- ers. Even if some FISs are misclassified by households as public schools in a household survey, to the extent that the likelihood of such misclassification is similar for all FISs, this should not affect substantially estimates of the extent to which various types of facilities reach the poor more than other types of facilities. This is because even if some FISs are misclassified by households as public facili- ties in a random way (the probability of misclassification is similar for all FISs), then the share of the beneficiaries that are poor in FISs is not affected. As for public providers, if FISs serve the poor proportionately more (less) than public facilities, the erroneous inclusion of some FISs in their pool would lead to a higher (lower) share of beneficiaries of public facilities identified as poor than warranted, but the bias should be small because the number of FISs misclassified as public facilities would be small as a proportion of the total number of public facilities. This itself is because the market share of FISs is significantly smaller than that of public facilities, and because only a subset of FISs would be misclas- sified. In addition, if it turns out that the profile of beneficiaries according to their poverty status or level of well-being is similar between faith-inspired and public facilities, the bias generated by potential misclassification of the facilities by households would be even smaller. This is not to say that if there is a risk of bias, Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 34 Data and Methodology it should not be checked through triangulation, but rather that in most cases in this study, such potential bias related to misidentification of FISs in the surveys is not likely to affect results substantially. As an example of triangulation to assess the validity of various sources of data for service delivery in education, consider data from the Ministry of Education of Ghana (Ministry of Education, Science and Sports 2009) for the academic year 2007/08. The data for education enrollment suggest that the CWIQ and GLSS5 surveys are not off the mark. In the 2007/08 academic year 83.0 percent of pri- mary school students (593,819 out of 3,501,543) were enrolled in public schools in Ghana, and the proportion of public schools was at 76.9 percent (12,909 public primary schools versus 3,876 private schools). The proportion of students in public schools in 2007/08 estimated by the Ministry of Education is higher than it appears in both the CWIQ and the GLSS5 surveys, but not by too large a margin. In the 2003 CWIQ survey, 73.0 percent of students aged six to eleven go to government primary schools, and in the GLSS5, 76.9 percent go to public primary schools. The proportions of students going to faith-inspired schools in the two surveys are 5.0 percent and 6.7 percent, respectively. Given that many of the faith-inspired schools initially created in Ghana have long been publicly funded, and thus are now considered as public schools by the Ministry and prob- ably by parents (it is not clear for most of these schools that they have retained their faith-inspired character), both the CWIQ and the GLSS5 survey appear to be capturing the market share of public, faith-inspired, and other private schools well, and thus are reliable, at least on average, to look at the characteristics of the various types of schools. Thus the order of magnitude of the market shares for public, private, and faith-inspired schools in the Ghana surveys seems reliable in terms of broad proportions. Statistical and Econometric Analysis This study aims to be accessible to a large public, including noneconomists, and especially practitioners interested in the area of religion and development. In some parts of the study however, regression analysis of survey data is provided. And throughout, basic statistics are computed from the household surveys. Because the analysis is based on household surveys, any estimation—whether through basic statistics or econometrics—entails standard errors. In the case of statistical tables, these standard errors are not reported in order to reduce the size of the tables. The reason why this can be done without much information loss is related to the nature of the variables being considered. Because most of the vari- ables for which statistics are provided are categorical (they only take two val- ues—zero and one), an approximation of the standard errors can be computed directly from the variable’s mean values, which are provided in the tables, and the sample size of the surveys or group within the surveys being considered (see appendix E for details). In addition, in most cases, because the sample sizes are large, statistical estimates tend to have small standard errors. In the case of regres- sions, again to facilitate the lecture of the study, detailed results are provided in appendix G, while the text focuses on the parameters of interest. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Data and Methodology 35 Different types of regression analysis are used. For example, the model used for analyzing the probability of enrollment in various types of schools is a multi- nomial logit. The model for looking at the correlates of whether or not a child can read or write as a function of child, household, and other characteristics, including the type of school attended, is a probit. The models used for analyzing the cost of schooling is a tobit, given censoring at zero values. When analyzing variables that take a value between 0 percent and 100 percent, fractional logit estimation is relied upon. All of those models are relatively straightforward, and available in standard statistical packages. The Stata software was used for all estimations. One important issue with regression analysis that must be briefly mentioned here is that of potential endogeneity bias due to self-selection into various types of service providers. If the dependent variable, such as the cost of a school, and one of the explanatory variables, such as the choice of school attended, are having an influence on each other, the regression models will produce estimates that are inconsistent and biased. For example, the cost that parents are ready to pay for their child’s education depends on the features of the school chosen, but the choice of school itself also depends on its cost, and ignoring this will lead to a bias in the estimate of the impact of the type of school chosen on cost. In all such cases, in order to properly estimate the correlates of cost (or other dependent variables), it is necessary to first estimate the probability of attending different types of schools, and for this it is recommended to find another variable that is correlated with the explanatory variable (the type of school attended) condition- ing on the other explanatory variables, but not with the dependent variable. This variable can then be used as an instrument in the estimation of the probability of attending different types of schools in order to produce consistent and unbi- ased estimates of the main regression, with bootstrapping in the second-stage regression. In this study, in several regressions the leave-out mean/share of students attending different types of schools in the primary sampling unit in which a stu- dent or patient lives is used as an instrument for the choice of the school in the first stage regressions.1 This is because the leave-out share is typically strongly correlated with the choice of a school (if only because it is an indication of the attractiveness of different types of schools in the vicinity of the household, and of the demand for these facilities), but it is unlikely to be correlated with learning outcomes beyond the fact that it affects the likelihood of going to a specific type of school. This idea of using the leave-out-mean for identification follows among others Ravallion and Wodon (2000). Limited Scope of the Study Focus on Service Delivery When conceiving this study, a choice was made to focus on the relationship between faith and service delivery in education, as opposed to the broader ques- tion of the impact of faith on education outcomes. A key reason for not looking Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 36 Data and Methodology in details at the impact of faith on behaviors that affect human development was related to the limits of the survey data used for this study, and especially the lack of information beyond faith affiliation. The national household surveys used for this study provide information on human development outcomes, as well as on the type of service provider used, but not on people’s faith apart from their broad faith affiliation. These surveys are therefore often not rich enough in terms of their questionnaire to assess in-depth what the impact of faith may be on various behaviors that affect education outcomes. When the only information available in the surveys is that of the faith affiliation of individuals or households, this leads to rather crude inferences about the impact of faith on behavior because the salience of a person’s faith is not taken into account. It is one thing to use statistical or regression analysis to assess whether faith- inspired schools have a better record than public and private secular facilities in terms of satisfaction among users, lower cost, or higher performance. It is also feasible to look at the impact of an individual’s faith on where a parent sends children to school. But it would seem farfetched to try to look at the impact of faith, controlling for other household and individual characteristics, on outcomes such as, say, test scores. The likelihood that faith as observed in the survey through broad characteristics only would have a direct effect on test score con- trolling for other factors such the attainment level of the children, the education of the parents, or their income and wealth status, is probably low, and even if such an impact were somehow observed, its mechanisms of transmission would have to be studied further in order to understand what exactly is going on. The same holds to a large extent for simpler topics such as education attainment. If there is a reasonable presumption that faith may have a direct impact on out- comes, it may make sense to look at the impact of faith on such outcomes. But again, when surveys provide only information on the broad faith affiliation of an individual or household, what can be learned through regression analysis about the potential impact of faith on education outcomes is limited. Therefore, given the already broad scope of this study in matters of service delivery, it is best not to analyze here in details how faith affects directly or indirectly selected human development outcomes, but this could clearly be an area for further work. Focus on Facilities-Based Services2 The term used so far in this study to identify faith-inspired providers of educa- tion services is FISs, which stands for faith-inspired schools, but could also stand for broader faith-inspired initiatives. This term is on purpose generic, and there is no intention in his study to discuss in any depth how various other terms could be used, or whether some terms are more appropriate than others for a specific purpose. Clearly, many terms have been used in the literature and will continue to be used. A review of religious health provision in Sub-Saharan Africa by Schmid et al. (2008) noted over 300 terms being used to describe various types of FISs engaged in healthcare in Africa.That list might grow further if the termi- nology used in education would be included. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Data and Methodology 37 Perhaps the alternative term that could have been used and that corresponds the most to what this study implies when referring to FISs is that of faith-based organizations (FBOs). As noted by Olivier (2011) in the case of health, six com- mon meanings tend to be associated with FBO: (1) faith-forming entities whose primary function is the formation of faith or worship, (2) religious leaders, (3) religious nongovernmental organizations, (4) community-based religious ini- tiatives, (5) networks, and (6) facilities. This itself is a quite heterogeneous list, and within that list, a religious nongovernmental organization is what is meant for the most part in this study when using the term FIS. This is because in much of the work that follows, the focus is on somewhat formal education facilities that provide services to households, rather than on other types of FISs. The term FIS was chosen over that of FBO or faith-based schools mainly because the use of “inspired” appears to be less restrictive than that of “based”. But beyond those preferences which may well be idiosyncratic, in terms of the substantive findings of this study, they could have been associated as well with the use of the term FBO or faith-based schools. Even if terminology is not essential in this study, it does not mean that it does not matter in general. In some cases terminology does matter, and advocates for one term versus another often feel strongly about this. Nevertheless, as far as research is concerned, the debate among academics over the term “FBO” (for example, Bradley 2009; Clarke 2006; Sider and Unruh 2004) may not have had much impact on policy (Olivier 2011). Today many terms tend to be used inter- changeably, and this is not necessarily problematic. In this study, in large part because of the limits of the data available for analysis, the term FIS refers in most cases to a faith-inspired physical facility that provides education services, such as a school. The study also focuses implicitly essentially on day schools, as opposed to evening or other programs. This simplicity is why it is not necessary to enter into debates on terminology. But it also implies that there is clear limit to the scope of this study, in that it focuses for the most part on formal facilities, as opposed to many other types of informal institutions or initiatives that are faith inspired and that deal with education in one way or another. Another issue of terminology that will not be debated in this study relates to what can be considered as faith inspired. The apparently simple binary distinc- tion between religious and secular is itself problematic, as religiosity is often a matter of degree. For example, the World Council of Churches has differentiated between “faith-related organizations,” “faith-background organizations,” “faith- centeredorganizations” and “faith-saturated organizations” (Doupe 2005, see also Sider and Unruh 2004). In Africa especially, the division between the religious and the secular is far from obvious because religion remains embedded in every- day life, and is also integral to the character of many secular-classified organizations. Some studies have attempted to assess FISs by ownership, for example by which denomination, faith tradition, or coordinating network the entity might belong to. This is also hazardous. In many countries faith-inspired schools are Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 38 Data and Methodology publicly funded, and in some cases ownership may not always be (or have been) clearly defined in the law, as is the case for the Democratic Republic of Congo. Classification is not value-free, and institutions and initiatives often adjust descriptions of their type and activities according to how they perceive it would be most useful to be understood in a particular situation or context. Classification has for example implications for access to resources, representation, and collabo- ration with governments. At one time it might be useful to be labeled an FIS or FBO to open certain funding doors, and at other times less so. The point of this discussion is not that the distinctions such as the religious- secular classification should be ignored, but rather that one should be aware of the heterogeneity that prevails among FISs, and of the complexities of the reali- ties on the ground. It should be clear that because of its focus on facilities-based services, this study should not be seen as descriptive of the entire engagement in education of FISs, as would be the case with a comprehensive account of the contribution of all FISs to various aspects of education provision. Such a compre- hensive account falls beyond the scope of this study. Conclusion The objective of this chapter was to describe the data used in the study, as well as some of the methodological choices that have been made, both in terms of the techniques used, and in terms of the scope of the work. In terms of data, most of the work is based on an analysis of nationally representative multipurpose house- hold surveys, with more in-depth work for Ghana and Burkina Faso. In addition to household survey data, the study also relies on administrative data from Ministries of Education and qualitative fieldwork information previously col- lected by the World Bank in April-June 2010 in both Ghana and Burkina Faso. In terms of methodology, it was suggested that the household survey data used for the analysis are valid for the purpose at hand, which is to discuss the role of FISs in service delivery. For example, the issue of misidentification of FISs by households is not likely to be too serious. A few other methodological issues related to standard errors and statistical significance, as well as to the risk of endogeneity bias in regression analysis were also mentioned. While the data available seem appropriate for the purpose at hand, the data would have limits for discussing the broader topic of the impact of faith on a range of behaviors that affect education outcomes. This is because the informa- tion on faith available in the surveys is limited to the broad faith affiliations of individuals. The surveys used here have detailed information on education attain- ment and the services used by households for education—this is precisely the reason for using those surveys, but the surveys have limited information on faith. Surveys that focus on faith and values, such as the World Values Surveys or the surveys on religion conducted by the Pew Forum could be used for work on faith and selected behaviors and attitudes, but they are not useful to look at the role of FISs in service provision. It is because of the limits of the information available in the surveys used for this study that the focus is on service delivery, and not Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Data and Methodology 39 faith and education more broadly. Another limit of the study is that it focuses on facilities-based service delivery, and not on the wider range of faith-inspired ini- tiatives in education that are not facilities based. The reason for this is again related to data—these initiatives, which are often local and community based, are typically not captured in household surveys. Nevertheless, despite these two main limits related to data, the scope of the study remains broad. Notes 1. To be more price on what is meant by leave-out-mean, assume we want to compute the leave-out share (mean) of children attending school. We first define the way obser- vations in a survey are to be grouped (alternatives include neighbourhoods, counties, and enumeration areas, among others), and then for every group and for each observa- tion in the group, we compute the share of children attending a specific type of school in the group, excluding the observation being analyzed. The share computed as described is known as the leave-out mean. Note that each observation in the same group might have a different value for the leave-out mean. When computing the leave- out means or shares, the specific child or patient is excluded. 2. This section is based in part on work with Jill Olivier. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 CHAPTER 4 Market Share Introduction Having explained the framework that guides this study and described the data and methodology used, the analysis of the role that faith-inspired schools (FISs) play in education in Sub-Saharan Africa starts with this chapter. Specifically, this chapter considers the question of the market share of FISs, while the next two chapters discuss questions regarding the reach to the poor of the various provid- ers, as well as the cost for households to use the services provided. In a loose way, one could say that chapters 4 through 6 are focused on the “supply side” of service delivery. By contrast chapter 7, on user satisfaction with the various types of providers, and the reasons for choosing specific providers (and especially faith-inspired providers) is mostly devoted to the “demand side” of service delivery. This is a loose characterization because for any of the ques- tions considered we observe the result of some type of equilibrium between the supply of services and the demand for services. Nevertheless, it remains that the size of the public, private secular, and faith-inspired providers, as well as the cost of their services and who they reach are in large part the result of supply deci- sions by the management of various providers, while the satisfaction with the services received and the reasons for choosing specific providers relate more to the preferences of the households that demand these services, and are thus more related to the “demand side” of service delivery. It is worth emphasizing at the outset that many private providers do not aim to increase their market share. Some private providers, and especially FISs, tend to be driven more by altruistic motives, as opposed to size or profit making. What matters to at least some of those providers is typically to serve the popula- tion with good quality services, and with a preferential option for the poor (this is a Christian term, but it is also often a core priority for Islamic facilities). Yet it is important to discuss market shares, if only to get a basic idea of the scope of the activities of various providers, especially given that some statements about market share appear to be off-track, especially in the case of FISs. Indeed, it is often stated that FISs account for about half of all education services provided in Sub-Saharan Africa. As mentioned in chapter 1, examples of statements to this Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   41 42 Market Share effect include that of past World Bank President James Wolfensohn who sug- gested that “Half the work in education and health in Sub-Saharan Africa is done by the church” (quoted by Kitchen 2002). Similarly, a recent UNFPA (2009, see also UNFPA. 2004) report states that “there is clearly an important parallel faith- based universe of development, one which provides anywhere between 30–60% of healthcare and educational services in many developing countries.” Many other examples of such statements could be given. There is some empirical basis for such statements, especially for healthcare, but it is often weak and the state- ments are problematic (see Olivier and Wodon 2012 in the case of market shares for healthcare). The statements about the market share of FISs appear to be at odds with data collected from Ministries of Education by the UNESCO Institute of Statistics (UNESCO 2011). These data suggest that on average the market share of all private providers of primary education in African countries is in the 12 percent to 14 percent range for primary education, and at about 20 percent for secondary education. There is of course a lot of variance between countries in these market shares, but these are the average values across most countries in Sub-Saharan Africa for all private sector providers. Some 50 years ago faith-inspired providers did account for a large share of education services in many countries, but this share dropped with the expansion of public facilities. Jimenez and Lockheed (1995) suggest that in East Africa, the market share of all private schools dropped from 53 percent in 1965 to 20 percent in 1985, while the drop was from 26 percent in West Africa in 1965 to 18 percent in 1985. The issue of the market share of FISs is actually not that essential—questions about the reach to the poor, cost, and performance of various providers are more important. The analysis presented in this chapter suggests that the market share of FISs, as well as secular private providers, is much smaller than is often believed, but this should not be considered in any way as stating that these providers do not play a fundamental role in the education systems of many African countries. They often do play a fundamental role, and this is precisely why it is better to clear the issue of the market share upfront. Indeed, suggesting that various pri- vate providers have a very high market share may actually undermine advocacy efforts for encouraging governments and donors to better support some private providers if it is clear that the advocacy or policy advice is based on data that suffers from serious flaws. The rest of the chapter follows a structure replicated in subsequent chapters. Section 2 first provides cross-country evidence. Section 3 then provides addi- tional evidence for Ghana and Burkina Faso. A brief conclusion follows. Cross-Country Comparisons Administrative Data on Market Share Administrative data are available from the UNESCO Institute of Statistics (UIS) on the role of the private sector in education in Africa. A recent UIS publication provides estimates of the share of enrollment in private schools at both the Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Market Share 43 ­ rimary and secondary levels circa 1999 and 2009 (UNESCO 2011). The data p are reproduced in table 4.1. In the UIS report, private schools are defined as those schools that are controlled and managed by a private body such as a nongovernmental organization, a religious body, a special interest group, a foun- dation, or a business enterprise. Both nonprofit and for-profit schools are consid- ered. Thus, what defines the public/private status of a school is who controls and manages the school, not who funds the school. Privately managed or controlled schools that are funded by the government are considered as private. Table 4.1  Market Share Estimates from UIS Administrative Data, Education percent Primary schools Secondary schools (ISCED1) (ISCED 2–3) 1999 2009 1999 2009 Angola n.a. 2.0−1 n.a. n.a. Benin 7.2 9.1−1 18.3 n.a. Botswana 4.7 5.0−2 4.1 3.0−1 Burkina Faso 10.8 14.2 33.1 42.0 Burundi 1.3+2 1.1 n.a. 8.8 Cameroon 27.7 22.8 31.6 22.2 Cape Verde n.a. 0.4 n.a. 12.5 Central African Republic 35.5 13.8 n.a. 9.7 Chad 25.0 8.6 14.0 n.a. Comoros 12.4 14.8−1 46.2 n.a. Congo, Rep. 10.0 35.4 8.7 n.a. Cote d’Ivoire 11.6 10.7 36.2 n.a. Congo, Dem. Rep. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. Equatorial Guinea 32.8 47.1 23.2 n.a. Eritrea 11.1 9.0 6.5 5.2 Ethiopia n.a. 6.0 n.a. 8.7 Gabon 17.2 n.a. 29.3 n.a. Gambia 13.7 19.5−1 26.1 26.7−1 Ghana 13.3 18.0 7.1 14.9 Guinea 14.7 26.3−1 n.a. 23.3−1 Guinea-Bissau 19.4 n.a. 12.8+1 n.a. Kenya n.a. 10.6 n.a. 12.7 Lesotho 0.1 n.a. n.a. n.a. Liberia 38.4 29.8−1 37.2 57.6−1 Madagascar 21.9 18.0 51.4+1 40.3 Malawi n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. Mali 21.9 39.7 n.a. 32.3 Mauritius 23.8 27.2 73.5 55.8 Mozambique n.a. 1.7 n.a. 11.5 Namibia 4.1 4.8 4.4 5.1 Niger 4.0 3.9 16.4 20.0 table continues next page Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 44 Market Share Table 4.1  Market Share Estimates from UIS Administrative Data, Education (continued) percent Primary schools Secondary schools (ISCED1) (ISCED 2–3) 1999 2009 1999 2009 Nigeria 6.5+1 5.4−2 28.9 13.7−2 Rwanda n.a. 2.5 42.5 31.9 Sao Tom & Pr. n.a. 0.3 n.a. 1.8 Senegal 12.1 13.5 26.3+1 19.8−1 Seychelles 4.7 8.2 3.2 7.1 Sierra Leone 1.1+1 n.a. 1.9+2 6.9−2 Somalia n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. South Africa 1.7 2.5−2 2.3 n.a. Swaziland n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. Togo 35.6 n.a. 17.7 n.a. Uganda n.a. 13.4 n.a. 51.5−1 United Republic of Tanzania 0.2 1.5 n.a. 11.1 Zambia n.a. 2.3 n.a. 2.6 Zimbabwe 88.1 n.a. 71.7 n.a. Average (all countries, incl. Zimbabwe in 1999) 16.6 12.8 25.0 20.0 Source: UNESCO 2011. Note: In the International Standard Classification of Education, ISCED-1 represents primary education, ISCED-2 lower secondary school, and ISCED-3 upper secondary schools. The upper scripts in the table indicate when the education system in a country differs from ISCED norms. n.a. = not applicable. The share of students in private schools in table 4.1 is based on enrollment in those schools divided by total enrollment at the education level being considered. The reference period is the academic year ending in 2009 or the most recent year available between 2006 and 2009 (the same logic applies for the 1999 esti- mates). The data are obtained through the UIS Annual Education Survey sent by UNESCO to its member states. The UIS study notes that changes in reporting may occur between years, for example if community schools are classified as public schools in one year, and as private schools in another. Such changes may affect trends over time, but in most countries they should be minor. In 2009, out of the 45 countries listed, data on private market shares at the primary level are missing for 10 countries: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Guinea- Bissau, Lesotho, Malawi, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Swaziland, Togo, and Zimbabwe (for four of these—the Democratic Republic of Congo, Malawi, Sierra Leone, and Swaziland, this study provides household survey-based estimates). Of the remaining 35 countries in table 4.1, the market share of private schools is below 5 percent in 11 countries, and above 15 percent in 9 countries. The aver- age market share for all countries with data in 2009 is 12.8 percent (simple aver- age not weighted by country populations). For the countries with data in 1999, the average private market share is 16.6 percent, but this is driven up by Zimbabwe (without Zimbabwe, the average private market share is 14.3 percent). Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Market Share 45 At the secondary level, the average private market share in 2009 for the coun- tries with data is at 20.0 percent, while it was at 25.0 percent for the year 1999, but this is again due in large part to data available for Zimbabwe in 1999, but not in 2009. As noted in the UNESCO report, when looking at the countries where data are available for both years, one observes a growing market share for private schools in most of the countries, especially at the secondary level. This can be interpreted as a sign of limited satisfaction on the part of parents with existing public schools, and it is likely that those who have been able to rely more on private schools come mostly from privileged backgrounds. Household Survey Data for Education and Comparison with Administrative Data Consider now estimates based on household surveys for primary and secondary education in table 4.2. The market shares for FISs range from 1.2 percent in Mali to 69.8 percent in the Democratic Republic of Congo for primary schools. The high market share in the Democratic Republic of Congo (and Sierra Leone) relates in part to the impact of conflict that led to state failure and an inability for public schools to function properly, but also to historical factors. Beyond these two countries, the highest market share for FISs is at 25.7 percent in Swaziland. The average market share for FISs is at 14.0 percent, versus 12.3 percent for secular private schools. Table 4.2  Market Share Estimates from Multipurpose Surveys, Education percent Public Faith- Other Total UIS estimate Difference with sector inspired private private (1) (2) UIS (1)–(2) Primary education Burkina Faso, 2007 88.9 4.9 6.3 11.2 14.2 −3.1 Burundi, 2006 96.2 2.1 1.7 3.8 1.1 2.7 Cameroon, 2007 74.1 12.6 13.3 25.9 22.8 3.1 Congo, Dem. Rep., 2005 18.4 69.8 11.8 81.6 — — Ghana, 2003 73.8 4.7 21.5 26.2 18.0 8.2 Ghana, 2005/06 73.3 7.4 19.3 26.7 18.0 8.7 Kenya, 2005 90.2 2.3 7.5 9.8 10.6 –0.8 Malawi, 2004 81.0 17.2 1.9 19.0 — — Mali, 2006 85.0 1.2 13.8 15.0 39.7 −24.7 Niger, 2007 70.0 8.7 21.3 30.0 3.9 26.1 Nigeria 2003/04 77.2 2.5 20.3 22.8 5.4 17.4 Congo, Rep., 2005 73.3 3.1 23.6 26.7 35.4 −8.7 Senegal, 2005 86.1 7.0 7.0 13.9 8.2 5.7 Sierra Leone, 2003/04 37.3 54.9 7.7 62.7 — — Swaziland, 2009/10 65.5 25.7 8.9 34.6 — — Uganda, 2010 75.0 2.4 22.7 25.0 13.4 11.6 Zambia, 2004 88.7 2.8 8.4 11.3 2.3 9.0 Average (using Ghana average) 73.8 14.0 12.3 26.2 14.6 3.9 table continues next page Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 46 Market Share Table 4.2  Market Share Estimates from Multipurpose Surveys, Education (continued) percent Public Faith- Other Total UIS estimate Difference with sector inspired private private (1) (2) UIS (1)–(2) Secondary education Burkina Faso, 2007 66.9 8.7 24.4 33.1 42.0 –8.9 Burundi, 2006 83.7 3.2 13.1 16.3 8.8 7.5 Cameroon, 2007 73.5 5.7 20.8 26.5 22.2 4.3 Congo, Dem. Rep., 2005 21.5 66.0 12.5 78.5 — — Ghana, 2003 84.7 3.2 12.1 15.3 14.9 0.4 Ghana, 2005/06 78.1 6.5 15.4 21.9 14.9 7.0 Kenya, 2005 81.0 6.2 12.8 19.0 12.7 6.3 Malawi, 2004 70.2 6.4 23.4 29.9 — — Mali, 2006 89.4 0.2 10.3 10.6 32.3 –21.7 Niger, 2007 81.8 0.8 17.4 18.2 20.0 –1.8 Nigeria 2003/04 84.0 1.2 14.7 16.0 13.7 2.3 Congo, Rep., 2005 77.4 1.1 21.5 22.6 8.7 13.9 Senegal, 2005 82.0 5.7 12.3 18.1 19.8 –1.8 Sierra Leone, 2003/04 54.9 41.6 3.6 45.2 — — Swaziland, 2009/10 74.0 19.6 6.4 26.0 — — Uganda, 2010 47.5 3.5 49.0 52.5 51.5 0.9 Zambia, 2004 92.5 3.8 3.7 7.5 2.6 4.9 Average (using Ghana average) 72.6 11.2 16.2 27.4 20.8 0.8 Source: Estimates based on national surveys. See Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. How do the UIS statistics compare with the estimates from household surveys used in this study? For the countries where estimates are available from both the surveys and the UIS data, the average difference in the estimates of private mar- ket share is 3.9 percent, which is not bad. The average private market share observed in the surveys is higher than the average share reported to the UIS by Ministries of Education, and this is what one would expect. Indeed, it is likely that some schools that do provide services to households are not recorded by Ministries of Education, because they operate without any official recognition. In some of the countries, the correspondence between the surveys and the UIS data is good, and this is the case for the two focus countries in this study. In Burkina Faso, the difference in market share is 3.1 percent, and in Ghana, it is at 8.2 percent and 8.7 percent depending on the survey (as compared to the estimate for 2009 in the UIS data), which still seems acceptable. In a few countries, the differences are very large, especially for Mali and Niger. In such cases, it is likely that the differences are due to a lack of comparability in the classifications used for the surveys and the administrative data. What about secondary education? Mali is again the country with the smallest market share, and the highest market share is obtained for the Democratic Republic of Congo. The average market share for FISs is at 11.2 percent, versus 16.2 percent for private secular schools. For the countries where estimates are available from both the surveys and the UIS data, the average difference in the Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Market Share 47 estimates of private market share is only 0.8 percent, but this hides large differ- ences for some countries. The average private market share observed in the sur- veys is again higher than the average share reported to the UIS by Ministries of Education. In Burkina Faso, the difference in market share is higher than before, at 8.9 percent, but more importantly the level of the market share of private schools is much higher at the secondary level than at the primary level. In Ghana, especially with the Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire (CWIQ) survey, the difference in market share between the surveys and the UIS data is smaller than at the primary level. Overall, for the purpose of this study, it seems that the sur- vey data provide a sound basis for analysis. Additional Evidence for Ghana and Burkina Faso In Ghana, no administrative estimates appear to be available on the number of students served by various types of FISs.1 However, in the case of Islamic schools, a report by USAID (2007) suggests that 1,418 Islamic schools under the supervi- sion of Islamic Education Unit (IEU) at the Ghana Education Service (GES) were serving 213,893 children at the time of the study (for a brief discussion of the various types of Islamic schools in Ghana, see chapter 3). Of those schools, 497 are kindergartens, 699 are primary schools, and 255 are junior secondary schools. If one assumes no differences in size between the schools at the various levels of education, this would yield a total of about 105,000 primary school students in IEU Islamic schools, or about 2.5 percent of total primary school enrollment. Unfortunately, data in the Ghana Living Standard Survey, Fifth Round (GLSS5) are available only on the share of students attending private religious schools, and not by faith affiliation. Still, given that Christian schools have traditionally had a larger footprint than Islamic schools in Ghana, the mar- ket share for FISs in primary education estimated at 4.5 percent in the 2003 Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire (CWIQ) is probably too low. The market share for FISs of 7.2 percent in the GLSS5 is likely to be closer to the true market share. Islamic leaders interviewed for the USAID report also suggest that there may be another 3,000 non-IEU Islamic schools, but these schools mostly attract students for evening or week end classes, while the students attend public schools during the day (on Islamic education in Ghana, see also Iddrisu, 2002, 2005). In the case of Burkina Faso, detailed administrative information from the Ministry of Education is available as to the market of faith-inspired schools. The figures in table 4.3 suggest that for the school year 2008/09, private primary schools account for 14.2 percent of all students, 17.9 percent of schools and 19.6 percent of teachers. The information is also available separately for private secu- lar, private Catholic, private Islamic, and private Protestant schools. The corre- sponding estimates obtained from the 2007 QUIBB survey, which distinguishes between the various types of faith-inspired schools, are also provided in table 4.3. The market share of private secular schools is slightly higher in the survey than in administrative records (6.3 percent nationally versus 5.2 percent), but it is lower for Islamic schools (2.6 percent in the survey versus 5.5 percent according Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 48 Market Share Table 4.3  Market Share by Type of Primary School, Burkina Faso percent Household survey 2007 Administrative data 2008/09 (students only) Type of school Students Institutions Teachers Urban Rural National Public 85.8 82.1 80.4 69.7 94.9 88.9 Private Secular 5.2 4.2 5.8 22.1 1.3 6.3 Private Catholic 1.6 1.3 1.6 5.2 0.5 1.6 Private Islamic 5.5 10.8 10.4 1.1 3.1 2.6 Private Protestant 1.8 1.5 1.7 2.0 0.3 0.7 All Faith-inspired 8.9 13.6 13.7 8.3 3.9 4.9 All Private 14.2 17.9 19.6 30.3 5.1 11.1 All Schools 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Source: MENA, Office of Research and Planning and QUIBB 2007. See Gemignani and Wodon 2013. Table 4.4  Trends in Primary School Enrolment by Type of School, Burkina Faso 1997–2008 2006/07 2008/09 All Primary 776,691 1,561,258 2,047,630 Private Secular 37,875 (4.9%)     84,347 (5.4%)    107,222 (5.2%) Islamic 24,823 (3.2%)     82,396 (5.3%)    113,580 (5.5%) Protestant 13,342 (1.7%)     21,830 (1.4%)     37,053 (1.8%) Catholic 3,110 (0.4%)     23,457 (1.5%)     32,207 (1.6%) Source: Ministry of Education of Burkina Faso. to the Ministry of Education) as well as for Protestant schools (0.7 percent in the survey versus 1.8 percent according to the Ministry). For Catholic schools, the same share is observed in the survey and in the administrative data (1.6 percent). It is also worth noting that in Burkina Faso as is the case in Ghana, the survey data suggest that the market share of FISs is substantially higher in urban than in rural areas. The administrative data suggest that Islamic schools tend to be much smaller than other schools (compare the share of students versus the share of schools), which may also explain why they tend to have more teachers per stu- dent than other types of schools (on Islamic education in Burkina Faso, see also Ouedraogo, 2008). Data are also available in Burkina Faso about the growth of the various types of schools (table 4.4). Since the late 1990s, both Catholic schools, with their perceived academic strengths, and Islamic schools, with their popular appeal, have grown in market share. Protestant schools have about the same market share in 2008/09 as compared to 1997/98, and private secular schools also gained slightly. Note that a policy of free and compulsory basic education was adopted in 2007 for publicly funded schools, but this does not seem to have affected fundamentally the various market shares between 2007/08 and 2008/09. As already mentioned, overall the different types of private schools in Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Market Share 49 2008/09 had a combined market share of 14.2 percent in 2008/09, versus 10.2 percent in 1996–2007. Conclusion The purpose of this chapter was to assess the market share of FISs as compared to other education providers in Africa, with additional work for Ghana and Burkina Faso. It is often suggested that FISs provide close to half of all education services in the region. The evidence to this effect is very weak. Household survey data suggest a market share of FISs for primary education of about 14.0 percent on average in the countries where information has been collected for this study, and this is reduced to 11.2 percent for secondary education, with large differ- ences between countries. When factoring in the role of private secular providers, the household survey data are broadly consistent with the estimates obtained for the market share of the private sector as a whole, as measured in administrative data collected by Ministries of Education for the UNESCO Institute of Statistics. Note 1. Administrative data actually appear to be available at least in principle on enrolment in faith-inspired schools in the Education Management Information Systems, but it is not clear whether the data has been coded and it was not feasible to obtain this infor- mation from the Ministry of Education. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 CHAPTER 5 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable Introduction While it is common to state that faith-inspired schools (FISs) provide a large share of education services in Sub-Saharan Africa, it is also often suggested that they provide services in priority for the poor and vulnerable, especially in rural areas. Again, the empirical evidence to back such statements is rather thin, mostly anecdotal, and often outdated. The issue of whether FISs reach the poor and vulnerable is probably more important than that of their market share. For a Ministry, being able to reach the poor and vulnerable, especially in remote areas, is important to ensure universal service, including within the context of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). If in some areas FISs may be able to contribute to this goal, and pos- sibly more so than existing public facilities, this would be a major comparative advantage for FISs which would appear to warrant support, instead of duplica- tion of efforts by locating new public facilities in those areas if they are already served. Even more importantly, for the FISs themselves, the ability to reach the poor and vulnerable is fundamental, given that some form of preferential option for the poor is a core component of their ethos. But what does it mean exactly to reach the poor? How can household survey data help in assessing whether FISs indeed reach the poor? At least four different interpretations of reaching the poor and vulnerable can be considered. A first question is whether in their own clientele, FISs serve the poor—as traditionally defined on the basis of the consumption per equivalent adult of households, or when that is not available, on the basis of an index of household wealth—more than other population groups. This is a traditional benefit inci- dence analysis question, which can be answered by estimating whether the share of the services of FISs that are used by individuals from poor households is smaller or larger than the share of the services used by individuals from wealthier households. In the case of postprimary education, it is doubtful that FISs will reach the poor in this specific way, simply because the cost of education tends to be high for the poor, resulting in lower demand for those services among the Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   51 52 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable poor than among the better-off. Thus, most postprimary education facilities, whether public, faith inspired, or private secular, will typically not reach the poor more than other groups in absolute terms due to the cost of their services which may not be affordable for the (very) poor. The case of primary education is a bit different, especially now that it is often free, at least in terms of direct fees (not in terms of other expenditures or opportunity costs) in public schools. In the case of primary education, if better off households send their children to private secu- lar schools, and if a country has reached relatively high levels of primary school enrolment, then public schools will often reach the poor more than the better off in absolute terms. Where FISs fall depends on their characteristics and those of the country in which they operate—in some cases faith-inspired primary schools may reach the poor more than other groups in absolute terms, while in others they may not (this will depend in large part on their cost for households). In addition, the reach to the poor of faith-inspired schools is typically lower at the secondary than at the primary level, as is the case for other education providers. A second question is whether FISs serve the poor proportionally more than other providers—namely public and private secular facilities. This is equivalent to asking a relative benefit incidence analysis question. Even if FISs do not reach the poor more than other groups in absolute terms, they may reach the poor more than other providers. This would mean that the share of the poor among the users of FISs would be larger than that of other types of providers. Clearly, because many secular private providers cater to the better off, one could expect that FISs would reach the poor more than other private providers. But whether they reach the poor proportionately more than public providers is an open ques- tion. Indeed, even if FISs would like to focus on the poor, this may not be feasible if they do not benefit from financial support from governments or various types of donors. Providing services of good quality is not cheap, and in the absence of external support, few FISs would be able to remain financially sustainable with- out cost recovery mechanisms. A lower level of financial support for FISs may require a higher level of cost recovery from the users of services, which may drive the poor away from faith-inspired facilities when the cost becomes too high. But FISs may also benefit from more funding if they are increasingly integrated within national education systems, although they may have less freedom in some areas. For example they may not be able to cross-subsidize the poor by charging more to the better off, and this may affect negatively their ability to serve the poor. While it is difficult to analyze the many factors that may lead FISs to be able (or not) to serve the poor proportionately more than other providers, simply measuring whether they do so (or not) is straightforward with household surveys. A third and more difficult question is whether FISs make special efforts to reach the poor. This is the question that is probably closest in spirit to the con- cept of the preferential option for the poor in Catholic social thought. While the first two questions will be dealt with exclusively in this chapter, the third ques- tion will be dealt both in this chapter and in chapter 6 devoted to the cost of Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable 53 the services provided by FISs, simply because cost—together with quality—is a key determinant of whether the poor are able to benefit from the services of FISs.1 That is, some evidence on special efforts by FISs to reach the poor will be discussed in this chapter, but this complex question will also be dealt with in chapter 6. Finally, a fourth question is whether FISs succeed in serving others in need who may not be defined as poor in the traditional sense, but are vulnerable. This is a complex question, not only because all of the three distinctions made earlier could apply here as well, but also because who is vulnerable depends on the type of vulnerability considered. One example would be to assess whether FISs serve orphans. Entire studies could be (and have been) devoted to these questions (see Olivier and Wodon 2012 for a review on some of the work on human immuno- deficiency virus-acquired immune deficiency syndrome [HIV-AIDS]). Given the limited scope of this study, it is not feasible to consider various types of vulner- abilities and assess to which extent FISs are able to help individuals and house- holds in these areas. All that can be done is to give some examples. This is done here by discussing the results from a quantitative analysis of the types of schools that welcome children with disabilities in Ghana. As in chapter 4 and the next two chapters, in order to tackle these four differ- ent but related questions, the chapter provides first cross-country evidence as to whether FISs reach the poor more than other facilities in absolute terms, or in comparison to public and private secular facilities. Thereafter the focus is on additional evidence for Ghana and Burkina Faso. A conclusion follows. Cross-Country Evidence As in the previous chapter devoted to estimates of market share, this section uses data from nationally representative household surveys whose questionnaire mod- ules for education are detailed enough to permit the identification of FISs among the various types of service providers that households rely upon. The focus is on the first two questions mentioned in the introduction—do FISs reach the poor more, in absolute or relative terms, with the poor defined in the traditional way through their level of consumption (or through an index of asset-based wealth when consumption is not available). That is, is the absolute share of the poor in the clientele of FISs higher than the share of other household groups? Second, are the services provided by FISs used by the poor proportionately more than the services made available by other providers? In table 5.1, data are provided on the share of the users of the services pro- vided by FISs by quintiles of well-being (the sum of the five estimates in each row is equal to 100 percent).2 Although poverty estimates vary between coun- tries, in most countries the bottom two or three quintiles can be considered as representing the poor. The evidence from the 16 countries suggests that for the most part, FISs do not serve the poor more than wealthier groups in absolute terms, and they may also not reach the poor proportionately more than public facilities. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 54 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable Table 5.1  Benefit Incidence for Education by Type of Provider percent Primary education Secondary education Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Burkina Faso, 2007 Public 12.6 17.9 21.6 23.5 24.4 4.4 5.6 14.8 23.1 52.0 Faith-inspired 8.1 6.3 17.0 23.8 44.8 1.1 2.5 8.8 19.5 68.1 Private secular 2.3 2.9 7.1 15.8 71.9 0.3 1.9 4.9 15.7 77.2 Total 11.8 16.4 20.5 23.0 28.4 3.1 4.4 11.9 21.0 59.6 Burundi, 2006 Public 22.7 22.7 21.2 20.1 13.3 22.7 22.7 21.2 20.1 13.3 Faith-inspired 27.9 21.7 16.6 19.6 14.2 27.9 21.7 16.6 19.6 14.2 Private secular 10.0 11.6 15.5 9.2 53.7 10.0 11.6 15.5 9.2 53.7 Total 22.6 22.5 21.0 19.9 14.0 22.6 22.5 21.0 19.9 14.0   Cameroon, 2007 Public 27.4 25.4 21.9 16.5 8.8 10.0 18.0 23.0 25.0 24.0 Faith-inspired 11.9 22.0 25.3 22.8 18.1 1.1 8.4 22.6 27.5 40.4 Private secular 2.5 8.6 17.3 27.8 43.8 1.9 7.1 16.7 30.1 44.2 Total 22.2 22.7 21.7 18.8 14.6 7.8 15.2 21.7 26.2 29.1   Democratic Republic of Congo, 2005 Public 23.4 21.0 19.9 20.9 14.9 18.4 18.5 20.8 20.9 21.5 Faith-inspired 23.5 22.6 20.9 18.5 14.6 20.7 19.5 20.7 19.1 20.1 Private secular 14.3 15.8 16.7 23.3 29.9 8.5 11.9 20.4 24.4 34.8 Total 22.4 21.5 20.2 19.5 16.4 18.7 18.3 20.7 20.1 22.2   Ghana, 2003 Public 23.1 26.6 22.4 17.4 10.5 9.6 19.0 25.9 26.2 19.3 Faith-inspired 17.1 24.8 23.1 19.6 15.5 11.4 15.0 28.6 26.0 19.1 Private secular 5.3 15.6 24.2 30.2 24.7 4.0 14.8 22.9 32.9 25.4 Total 19.0 24.1 22.8 20.2 13.8 8.9 18.4 25.7 27.0 20.0   Ghana, 2005/06 Public 25.6 25.2 22.7 16.9 9.7 14.9 20.3 23.8 22.7 18.4 Faith-inspired 7.4 14.1 18.4 30.4 29.8 4.3 11.9 19.1 30.5 34.2 Private secular 8.0 13.9 21.4 28.3 28.4 6.3 15.4 16.8 28.7 32.8 Total 20.8 22.2 22.2 20.1 14.8 12.9 19.0 22.4 24.1 21.7   Senegal, 2005 Public 22.0 20.3 20.2 19.0 18.5 13.3 12.9 17.1 23.4 33.4 Faith-inspired 13.0 11.1 11.9 16.4 47.5 6.8 9.2 8.9 18.0 57.2 Private secular 2.0 5.6 7.9 24.3 60.3 3.8 7.7 7.6 21.4 59.5 Total 20.0 18.7 18.8 19.2 23.4 11.8 12.0 15.5 22.8 37.9   Sierra Leone, 2003/04 Public 17.1 16.1 24.2 22.7 19.9 4.6 8.0 14.4 22.9 50.2 Faith-inspired 24.4 21.8 22.0 19.7 12.2 9.1 17.0 20.8 24.2 28.9 Private secular 21.1 20.9 9.2 19.5 29.4 1.8 8.0 6.6 8.9 74.7 Total 21.4 19.6 21.8 20.8 16.4 6.4 11.8 16.8 22.9 42.2 table continues next page Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable 55 Table 5.1  Benefit Incidence for Education by Type of Provider (continued) percent Primary education Secondary education Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5   Swaziland, 2009/10 Public 25.3 23.0 23.6 17.2 10.8 16.7 22.1 21.9 23.7 15.6 Faith-inspired 26.9 23.5 20.0 18.6 11.1 16.5 14.6 18.1 28.7 22.2 Private secular 8.3 12.6 15.1 23.9 40.1 7.7 1.8 16.8 9.9 63.8 Total 24.2 22.2 21.9 18.2 13.4 16.1 19.3 20.8 23.8 20.0   Kenya, 2005 Public 24.0 23.9 21.7 18.2 12.2 8.7 16.1 21.7 26.7 26.9 Faith-inspired 11.6 17.8 12.5 23.4 34.7 5.7 12.1 23.0 28.6 30.7 Private secular 6.7 10.9 12.3 24.7 45.5 6.5 13.6 23.5 14.7 41.7 Total 22.4 22.8 20.8 18.8 15.2 8.2 15.5 22.0 25.3 29.1   Zambia, 2004 Public 19.8 21.1 20.7 20.8 17.6 12.5 16.5 18.8 23.8 28.4 Faith-inspired 11.6 16.9 21.5 27.7 22.3 11.7 7.5 14.1 17.3 49.4 Private secular 12.3 12.6 12.4 18.4 44.4 1.2 3.4 12.3 17.4 65.8 Total 18.9 20.2 20.0 20.8 20.0 12.1 15.7 18.4 23.3 30.6   Malawi, 2004 Public 23.4 23.0 21.5 18.4 13.8 9.2 13.9 16.4 25.7 34.8 Faith-inspired 23.3 21.2 19.6 21.2 14.6 6.4 1.0 8.6 21.2 62.8 Private secular 3.3 4.7 10.5 14.2 67.3 3.8 9.5 10.2 18.7 57.8 Total 23.0 22.3 21.0 18.8 15.0 7.7 12.1 14.5 23.8 42.0   Congo, Rep., 2005 Public 27.2 26.6 21.3 17.3 7.6 20.5 22.7 21.7 20.6 14.5 Faith-inspired 13.7 13.3 30.1 25.7 17.3 20.8 28.0 13.6 30.0 7.6 Private secular 9.9 16.7 22.4 23.4 27.6 5.3 13.3 20.3 31.0 30.1 Total 22.7 23.9 21.8 19.0 12.6 17.2 20.8 21.3 22.9 17.8   Nigeria 2003/04 Public 16.7 17.8 22.5 23.3 19.8 12.4 15.5 19.0 24.0 29.1 Faith-inspired 16.9 20.9 18.4 22.6 21.2 25.8 8.3 9.0 15.4 41.5 Private secular 9.8 13.3 14.4 23.1 39.4 6.7 9.5 14.1 24.6 45.1 Total 15.3 16.9 20.8 23.2 23.8 11.7 14.5 18.2 24.0 31.6   Niger, 2007 Public 18.8 20.0 20.7 21.7 18.7 11.9 12.2 13.9 23.2 38.8 Faith-inspired 17.2 15.1 19.3 18.4 30.0 0.0 0.0 23.7 26.3 50.0 Private secular 13.5 16.8 18.2 23.7 27.8 1.5 2.8 3.0 4.8 87.9 Total 17.6 18.9 20.1 21.9 21.6 10.0 10.4 12.1 20.0 47.4   Mali, 2006 Public 15.4 19.5 20.4 24.1 20.6 6.6 10.5 13.7 28.3 41.0 Faith-inspired 1.2 4.8 19.8 16.7 57.5 0.0 0.0 69.7 30.3 0.0 Private secular 5.0 7.4 6.3 21.6 59.8 2.0 5.2 6.6 21.5 64.8 Total 13.8 17.6 18.4 23.7 26.5 6.1 9.9 13.1 27.6 43.3 table continues next page Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 56 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable Table 5.1  Benefit Incidence for Education by Type of Provider (continued) percent Primary education Secondary education Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Uganda, 2010 Public 26.9 23.9 21.5 18.4 9.3 13.0 16.3 20.5 24.5 25.8 Faith-inspired 12.6 25.0 16.8 23.5 22.0 5.1 10.6 29.5 16.2 38.7 Private secular 8.9 14.4 19.0 23.0 34.7 6.3 9.1 13.3 22.8 48.5 Total 22.5 21.8 20.8 19.5 15.4 9.5 12.5 17.3 23.4 37.3 Average Public 21.7 21.8 21.6 19.9 15.0 12.3 15.7 19.0 23.8 29.2 Faith-inspired 16.0 17.7 19.5 21.5 25.3 10.4 10.9 20.7 23.1 34.9 Private secular 8.5 11.8 14.2 21.6 43.9 4.5 8.2 13.2 19.1 54.9 Total 20.0 20.7 20.8 20.3 18.2 11.2 14.6 18.1 23.3 32.8 Source: Estimates based on national household surveys. See Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. Note: For the overall average, the data for Ghana are the average for the two surveys (Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire [CWIQ] and Ghana Living Standard Survey, Fifth Round [GLSS5]). On average, for primary education, 16.0 percent of the clientele of FISs belongs to the bottom quintile, versus 25.3 percent in the top quintile. In com- puting these averages across the countries in the sample, the two survey data points for Ghana are themselves averaged. Note that some of the country esti- mates by quintile may have large standard errors, especially when the market share of FISs is smaller. But even if one takes out from the regional average the countries where the market share is very low, the results remain qualitatively the same. For secondary education, as expected (given that the poor tend to have lower educational attainment) the differences are even larger between quintiles, with 10.4 percent of students in faith-inspired schools belonging to the bottom quintile, versus 34.9 percent in the top quintile. Also, while in some countries faith-inspired schools are located more in urban areas, the reverse is observed in other countries. What is likely to be at the source of those findings is the fact that the poor are less able than wealthier households to afford the cost of schooling (direct fees, indirect costs for uniforms and transport for example, and opportunity costs). While this is especially the case at higher levels of schooling, it also plays out at the primary level. Also, some FISs tend to cater to the well-to-do with an educa- tion of higher quality, but at a higher cost. There are again differences between countries, as expected. In Cameroon, the very poor tend not to rely on FISs much, and this is also the case in Burkina Faso, Mali, Senegal, Kenya, the Republic of Congo, Uganda, and Zambia. By contrast, in Burundi, Swaziland, and Malawi, participation by the very poor in FISs is much higher, at least at the primary level. Note that in the case of Ghana, the two surveys provide quite different estimates of the benefit incidence of FISs. The benefit incidence estimates for FISs are much more favourable to the poor when using the Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire (CWIQ) survey than is the case when relying on data from the Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable 57 Ghana Living Standard Survey, Fifth Round (GLSS5). This issue will be dis- cussed in more details in section 3. How do FISs compare to public facilities on average across the 16 countries? The benefit incidence by quintile for FISs is less propoor that for public facili- ties, for both primary and secondary schools. For example, as mentioned earlier, on average 16.0 percent of the primary education services provided by FISs reach children in the bottom quintile, and the proportion that reaches the sec- ond quintile is 17.7 percent. For public facilities, the corresponding shares are 21.7 percent and 23.8 percent. At the secondary level, only 10.4 percent of the services provided by FISs reach children in the bottom quintile, and the propor- tion is virtually the same in the second quintile (10.9 percent). For public schools, the corresponding shares are 12.3 percent and 15.7 percent. On the other hand, as expected, the services provided by faith-inspired schools are less titled towards better off children than is the case for private secular schools, for which 43.9 percent of the students in primary schools and 54.9 percent of the students in secondary schools come from households belonging to the top quintile. To give a better appreciation for the high degree of heterogeneity between countries as to whether FISs reach the poor, consider the case of two very differ- ent countries: the Democratic Republic of Congo and Cameroon. The Democratic Republic of Congo is a case of an education system where most children live in poverty and where FISs have a large market share due in part to state failure. As noted by Backiny-Yetna and Wodon (2009b), the aftermath of independence was marked by political instability in the Democratic Republic of Congo, but the country was relatively peaceful and growing. From the mid-1960s to the mid- 1970s, school enrollment grew, fueled not only by population growth but also by gains in enrollment rates, at an annual rate of five percent in primary, 19 percent in secondary, and 24 percent in tertiary education (World Bank 2005). Enrollment growth was reduced between the mid-1970s and mid-1990s due in part to an economic crisis triggered by a decline in copper prices. Thereafter, the civil war that followed the end of the 32-year Mobutu regime had a devastating effect on the economy, the population (3.0–5.5 million deaths were related directly or indirectly to the war), and human development. Primary and secondary education in the Democratic Republic of Congo are provided by government schools (écoles non-conventionées), faith-inspired schools (écolesconventionnées), and private schools. Government and faith-inspired schools receive subsidies and are considered public schools. Private schools do not benefit from state support. The term “publicly supported,” although techni- cally correct, is however somewhat of a misnomer in the Democratic Republic of Congo, because most of the costs of education are borne by households. Indeed public financing for education has declined substantially and funding for education is very limited. As noted in World Bank (2005), the relationship between the government and religious institutions has however not been clearly defined. Private schools, including faith-inspired schools, were nationalized in 1974, but only for three years after which the government entered into an Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 58 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable agreement with the four major religious networks (Roman Catholic, Protestant, Kimbanguiste, and Islamic). The agreement stipulates that faith-inspired schools must follow the public curriculum and norms on class size, teacher qualifications and salaries, and student assessment. In principle, the schools belong to the state even if they are managed by religious organizations. A 1986 law that gave broad authority to the Ministry of Education does not mention the religious school networks, even though a National Council of Education with representation from both the government and the religious networks was later created to coor- dinate national policy. In practice, each religious network has its own structure and manages its schools. Each network also has to rely for the most part on its own resources to pay for the schools and teachers, with parents providing the bulk of the funding through various levies. The limited resources available to pay teachers, renovate the schools, reduce overcrowding, and provide instructional materials are a key factor leading to poor quality in education. Using data on perceptions of literacy and numeracy, Backiny-Yetna and Wodon (2009b) suggest low performance and few differences in performance between FISs and government schools. The analysis also suggests few differences by level of well-being in the students enrolled in FISs and government schools. One could thus say that FISs do not reach the poor more than government schools, but that would miss the point. In the case of the Democratic Republic of Congo, FISs serve the poor more in abso- lute terms than better-off households, simply because the overwhelming major- ity of the population is poor. And in addition, with about 70 percent of the stu- dents in faith-inspired schools, the school system is essentially faith inspired, and remained functioning in large part because FISs continued their work during the civil war. At another extreme, consider the case of Cameroon, a lower-middle-income country, where fewer children live in poverty (even if poverty remains high, as discussed by Backiny-Yetna et al. 2009a). In Cameroon, about one in ten stu- dents attends a faith-inspired school. As was the case in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the state provides subsidies to both government and faith-inspired schools, but not to private schools. However, the subsidies per student provided by the state to faith-inspired schools are typically lower than the subsidies pro- vided to public schools. This means that FISs have to raise more funds than public schools to be financially sustainable, which makes them more expensive for parents than public schools and results in a weaker targeting performance in reaching the poor. Backiny-Yetna and Wodon (2009a) use the 2007 survey for Cameroon to ana- lyze who FISs serve, how much parents have to pay for their children to attend FISs, and what the performance of FISs is, in comparison to public and secular private schools.3 The focus of the analysis is on cost. While the data suggest that secular private schools are by far the most expensive, they also suggest that faith- inspired schools are significantly more expensive than public schools in both urban and rural areas. Most of the differences in costs are related to registration and other fees. By contrast, fees for parent associations and other costs are not too Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable 59 different between the various types of schools. Given higher costs, it is not surpris- ing that FISs in Cameroon serve proportionately more better-off children, with public schools serving proportionately the poor more (secular private schools are even more tilted toward better-off students, as expected). For example, 16 per- cent of students in faith-inspired schools belong to the poorest quintile of well- being in rural areas, versus 34 percent for government schools. In urban areas, students in the top quintile account for 32 percent of all students in faith-inspired schools, versus 22 percent for public schools. Thus, while in the Democratic Republic of Congo FISs enroll most students, many of whom are poor, given that close to three fourths of the population is in poverty, in Cameroon FISs serve only a minority of students who are on average better off than the population as a whole. In the case of the Democratic Republic of Congo, FISs tend to have very limited resources, while in the case of Cameroon, through a combination of state subsidies and cost recovery from households who can afford to pay more for schooling, FISs have more resources at their disposal. This brief comparison of the Democratic Republic of Congo and Cameroon is just one example of the heterogeneity that exists between faith-inspired schools in Africa, and there may be a similar degree of heterogeneity within each of the countries, not only according to whom schools serve, how much they cost, and how well they perform but also in terms of the faith traditions to which they belong. Additional Evidence for Ghana and Burkina Faso Difference in Benefit Incidence between the Two Surveys for Ghana In the case of Ghana, there is an issue emerging from the previous section, namely that the two surveys used generate rather different results in terms of the benefit incidence of faith-inspired schools by quintile of well-being. The CWIQ survey suggests a relatively positive outcome for FISs, with the poor benefiting from faith-inspired schools almost as much as other groups, while the GLSS5 suggests that the poor benefit much less than other groups. In theory, this could happen because the two surveys are implemented almost three years apart from each other. Many faith-inspired facilities are located in urban or peri-urban areas, and poverty has been reduced very rapidly in those areas in the first few years of the new millennium. By contrast poverty reduction has been much weaker in rural areas (Coulombe and Wodon 2007). This must have contributed to a dete- rioration of the benefit incidence in the lower quintiles for education faith- inspired service delivery between the implementation of the CWIQ in 2003 and that of the GLSS5 mostly in 2006. Apart from the possibility of changes over time in benefit incidence, which of the two surveys is likely to be more appropriate in order to answer the question of whether FISs serve the poor more or less than other groups? Three aspects may be considered to try to answer this question. The first relates to the indicator used to identify the poor in each of the two surveys. In principle, the identification of the poor in the GLSS5 is more precise than in the CWIQ because in the GLSS5, Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 60 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable the quintiles of well-being are based on detailed measures of the consumption of household per equivalent adult, while in the CWIQ, the poor are identified through imputed levels of consumption. However, there is a slight problem in the measures of poverty based on the GLSS5 that matters for this study. As discussed by Coulombe and Wodon (2007), because of the use of price indices to update poverty lines over time, and because of a likely underestimation of the increase in the cost of living in urban areas outside of Accra, the estimates of poverty for urban households outside of the capital city are likely to be underestimated in 2005/06. But this is also where a substantial number of FISs are located. Thus the benefit incidence analysis for FISs in the GLSS5 may suggest too few users in the lower quintiles of well-being versus what would be observed otherwise. The second aspect relates to the sample size of the two surveys. Because the CWIQ survey is much larger than the GLSS5 (49,000 households in the CWIQ versus less than 8,000 in the GLSS5), the number of observations on which the benefit incidence estimates by quintiles are based is also much larger in the CWIQ, which generates a higher level of confidence in those estimates. Overall then, for measuring reach to the poor, the CWIQ survey is probably better than the GLSS5. Also, the surveys were based on a different sampling frame. In terms of the household weights and number of observations in the surveys, it seems that the proportion of the population in urban areas is too high with the GLSS5, and more reasonable with the CWIQ. This also may have contributed to having a better benefit incidence for FISs in the CWIQ than is the case in the GLSS5. Given the above, it is a judgment call as to whether more weight should be placed for the benefit incidence on the CWIQ than on the GLSS5. It is likely that the “right” estimate of benefit incidence is somewhere in between the two estimates provided by the surveys, but possibly closer to the CWIQ results than those obtained with the GLSS5. Efforts to Reach Vulnerable Groups: Children with Disabilities in Ghana The evidence presented on Ghana does not mean that FISs do not make efforts to reach the poor and, more generally, vulnerable individuals and households. Even if FISs may not be located more in poor areas, or even if they may not serve the poor statistically more than other groups, or more so than other providers, they may still do what they can to reach the poor and vulnerable within the con- straints they face. They may well put in practice a “preferential option for the poor” even if this is not easily detectable from aggregate survey statistics in a simple statistical way. This question will be discussed further in this study, includ- ing in chapter 6 when analyzing the cost of services for the poor and the ability of FISs to subsidize the poor. But before doing that, it is useful to document briefly some of the apparent efforts made by FISs to reach the poor and vulnerable. Consider first the case of children with disabilities in Ghana. The context for this analysis is that historically FISs have had a tradition of support to education beyond the provision of schools. Numerous religious congregations and commu- nity organizations support orphans and vulnerable children as well as those in need of special education. This typically gets captured as social work in education Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable 61 rather than as educational service provision. But the first school established in Ghana for those with special needs was set up by missionaries in the 1940s. In the Education Act of 1961 the government assumed responsibility for training and rehabilitation of people with disabilities, but it took some time for this to be translated in practice. The question is whether today, we can observe a difference in terms of attitudes towards children with disabilities between different types of schools, as might be revealed by patterns of enrollment in the various types of schools. The analysis is carried with the large sample CWIQ survey for 2003. In most household surveys, because the number of children identified as having disabili- ties is typically small, it is not feasible to conduct detailed statistical or regression analysis to assess whether children with disabilities are less likely to go to school, including by type of school. In the CWIQ survey however, the very large sample size makes such an analysis feasible. The CWIQ survey identifies persons with disabilities, and asks about the type of disability. One question asks about the type of disability according to the following characteristics: Seeing, Hearing/ speech, Moving, No feeling, Strange behavior, Fits, Learning, and Other. Because the sample size remains small even in the CWIQ survey according to that catego- rization, this information is not used. But the survey also asks whether the dis- ability is mild, moderate, or severe, and that information can be used.4 Table 5.2 shows that for children aged five to eighteen without disability, the probability of not being enrolled in school is at 21 percent, versus 33 percent for children with one or more disabilities. The likelihood of being enrolled decreases with the severity of the disability. In addition, the data suggest that the likelihood of being enrolled in faith-inspired schools is similar for children with and without disability, while it is lower for children with disabilities in the other two types of schools (public and private secular). It is also clear that in the various types of schools the probability of enrollment decreases with the severity of the disability, but the pattern according to the severity of the disability is less steep for faith- inspired schools. There is thus some statistical evidence that would support the hypothesis that religious schools might be more welcoming to children with disability than other types of schools, although none of the schools are Table 5.2  Enrollment Rates by Type of Schools and Disability Status, Ghana 2003 percent Public Faith-inspired Private secular Not enrolled Disability status No disability 59.4 3.8 15.6 21.1 Disability 48.3 3.9 14.9 32.9 Severity of the disability Mild 54.7 3.7 20.3 21.4 Moderate 47.4 4.6 16.4 31.6 Severe 39.9 2.8 4.8 52.5 Source: Estimation based on the Ghana CWIQ 2003. See Adoho and Wodon 2013a. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 62 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable Table 5.3  Impact of Disability on School Enrolment by Type of School, Ghana 2003 Faith-inspired Private secular Not enrolled Disability 0.0134* 0.0052 0.0351 Moderate disability −0.0045 0.0031 0.0735** Severe disability −0.0029 −0.0647*** 0.2675*** Boy −0.0016 0.0050*** −0.0459*** Boy with a disability −0.0251** −0.0057 −0.0074 Source: Estimation based on the Ghana CWIQ 2003. See Adoho and Wodon 2013a. Note: Statistical significance levels: *=10 percent, **=5 percent, ***=1 percent particularly good at catering to children with disabilities. In addition, differences between schools may be related to other characteristics of the households send- ing their children to faith-inspired schools, as opposed to the characteristics of the schools themselves, so that regression analysis is needed to sort this out. In table 5.3, regression analysis is used to assess whether differences in enroll- ment patterns between types of schools remain after controlling for household and child characteristics including disability status. The model is a multinomial logit with enrollment in public schools as the reference category (full results are in appendix G). The coefficient estimates for disability and the interaction effect for boys suggest that girls with disabilities are more likely to be enrolled in faith- inspired schools than in public schools, but this is not the case for boys. In fact, boys with a disability are more likely to be enrolled in private secular schools, all other things being equal. However, when a child has a severe disability, the likeli- hood of enrollment in private secular schools is lower, while there are no differ- ences between faith-inspired and public schools. Of course, the likelihood of not being enrolled is especially high for children that tend to have a more severe disability. At least two different interpretations can be provided for these results. A first interpretation would be to suggest that the lower likelihood for private schools to enroll students with severe disabilities as compared to both public and reli- gious schools may be due to the fact that private schools tend to be funded independently, and therefore do not have the same obligation as other schools (or the same oversight) to welcome children with a severe disability. Faith-inspired (many of which are publicly funded) and public schools would fare roughly equally because of that legal obligation, or in the case of FISs that are not publicly funded, the acceptance of some children with severe disability might be related to their efforts to serve those who are vulnerable. Another interpretation might be that parents with a child with a severe disability are less likely to send that child to an expensive private school because the expected benefits of schooling for children with disability are lower than for children without disabilities. Under budget constraints, parents would then choose to send in priority children with- out a disability to private schools. Whatever the explanation, there is some limited) evidence that faith-inspired schools may make special efforts towards (­ children with severe disabilities, or at least more so than private secular providers. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable 63 Conclusion There is a widespread perception that education FISs in Sub-Saharan Africa reach the poor in priority, yet what this means in practice is often not discussed in detail and with robust empirical evidence. Different interpretations of what “reaching the poor” may mean have been discussed in this chapter. The first interpretation would suggest that FISs serve the poor more than other household groups in their own clientele. Statistically, this seems not to be the case, neither in Sub-Saharan Africa as a whole, nor in Ghana and Burkina Faso. This is not surprising, given that education services are subject to at least some level of cost recovery on the part of FISs as well as other providers, so that the demand for those services is often lower among the poor because of a lack of affordability. A second interpretation would be to say that FISs serve the poor proportion- ally more than other providers, and especially public providers (the fact that FISs are likely to serve the poor more than private secular and often for-profit facilities seems clear). The evidence that emerges from nationally representative house- hold surveys is that this is also not necessarily the case. Often, FISs serve the poor about in the same proportion as public providers and in some cases much less so. The evidence on Ghana is mixed. One survey suggests that in Ghana FISs serve the poor about as much as public providers, yielding a similar benefit incidence to that obtained for public facilities. But the other survey suggests that FISs are not well targeted to the poor. While the first survey seems better calibrated than the second, there is no evidence that FISs serve the poor more than public pro- viders, and the same is observed for education in Burkina Faso. Now, even if FISs may not reach the poor more than other household groups in absolute terms or even in relative terms when compared with public facilities, and even if they are not located proportionately more in poor areas, FISs may still play a special role in making services more affordable for the poor and vulnera- ble, for example by subsidizing such services in one way or another. They may still, within their means and the constraints they face, try to serve the poor pref- erentially. In addition, a desire to serve those in need is not necessarily focused only on those who are considered as poor in the traditional monetary sense. In the case of education, one especially vulnerable group is that of children with severe disabilities. Some evidence was provided that FISs make special efforts to welcome children with disabilities in Ghana. As to the question of whether FISs subsidize the poor, it is discussed in the next chapter. Notes 1. One subquestion here is whether FISs are able to use specific strategies to better serve the poor, for example by cross-subsidizing their services—either within a particular facility, or across a system of facilities. And another sub-question relates to how FISs use their resources. In the case of healthcare for example, Reinikka and Svensson (2010) in a quasi-experiment about the provision of untied block grants to health centers in Uganda that FISs appear not to be motivated by profit or perks maximiza- tion, but rather by a desire to make more of their services available and affordable to the poor—that is, they seem to be “working for God.” Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 64 Reach to the Poor and Vulnerable 2. As mentioned in chapter 2, depending on the survey, the quintiles are based either on measures of consumption per capita or per equivalent adult taking into account differ- ences in the cost of living between areas, or on an index of wealth obtained using facto- rial analysis when consumption data is not available. 3. Performance, as measured by perceptions among parents as to whether their children can read and write in English or French (Cameroon is a bilingual country), suggests that faith-inspired schools may do slightly less well than other schools in urban areas, but better in rural areas (this is based on simple statistics however, and not on econo- metric analysis controlling for a range of factors that may affect performance). 4. Rates of disability as measured in household surveys such as the CWIQ tend to be underestimated, with estimates of the population with a disability typically in the range of two to three percent, while it has been suggested based on other more detailed data that also captures less severe forms of disability that the proportion of people with disabilities might be much higher, at up to ten percent in many countries. Yet, for the point of view of the analysis carried here, even if the incidence of disability is indeed underestimated, one can still measure differences in enrollment by school types between those declaring a disability in the survey. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 CHAPTER 6 Private Cost of Education Introduction The questions of the extent to which faith-inspired schools (FISs) reach the poor is closely related to the cost for households of the services provided by FISs in comparison to other providers, and the amount of funding available to FISs. In some cases, FISs may benefit from special resources to make services more affordable for the poor, for example when they get support from congregations, whether these are locally based or located in developed countries, or from other organizations including government agencies. In the absence of such support, subsidies granted to the poor may require charging better-off students more for the services provided to those groups, or relying on staffs who are willing to work at below market wages. Different strategies for reducing the cost of services for the poor may not have the same medium- or long-term consequences. For example, relying on staffs who are willing to work at below market wages (as may be the case for nuns), or on resources made available by external groups may not carry a risk in terms of financial sustainability as long as the staffs are willing to continue to work for low wages or as long as external funders are willing to continue to provide resources in order to make services more affordable for the poor. By contrast, differentiated subsidies for the poor paid for by asking higher fees from other groups—what could be referred to as a Robin Hood strategy—would not be sustainable under competitive markets. Indeed, under competitive mar- kets, subsidies for the poor would lead not only to poor students relying on FISs as compared to other facilities but also to fewer nonpoor students, which would ultimately be unsustainable in the absence of other funding or cost reduction mechanisms, such as those mentioned earlier. It might be feasible under different types of markets to charge more to the better-off in order to subsidize the poor— for example, under a segmented market with quality differentiated among others according to faith, better-off households who value the faith affiliation of a school may be willing to pay more for that school than for another school, which may then make it feasible for a facility to subsidize the services provided to the poor. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   65 66 Private Cost of Education Yet it is not clear how much resources might be generated through price differ- entiation for such purposes. The fact that the issues of cost and funding go hand in hand is exemplified by an interesting analysis of health service provision in Uganda by Reinikka and Svensson (2010). The authors use a change in financing of not-for-profit health- care providers through untied grants to test two theories of organizational behav- iour. The first theory postulates that not-for-profit providers are intrinsically motivated to serve the poor and will therefore use new resources to expand their services or cut the cost of these services. The second theory postulates that not- for-profit providers are captured by their managers or workers and behave like for-profit actors. Although they may not appropriate profits, they would tend to use untied grants to raise the salaries of their staff or provide them with other benefits that would not directly serve the poor. The authors’ empirical results suggest that the altruistic theory is validated by the data (the grants were used to provide more services at lower costs), and that the results matter in the sense that this altruistic difference makes a difference for the poor. Household surveys can be used to test for differences in the cost of education between facilities, and between different types of households depending on their level of well-being. This can be done after controlling for a range of factors that may affect the cost or education for households, as well as for the endogeneity of provider choice on the part of households. This is done in this chapter together with cross-country evidence on the cost of FISs in section 2, followed as usual by a more detailed analysis for Ghana and Burkina Faso in section 3. Cross-Country Evidence Many but not all of the multipurpose household surveys used for this study have information on the cost paid by households for education. Summary statistics for the average costs by type of provider are provided in tables 6.1 and 6.2 for nine countries where that information is available. These are yearly costs for primary and secondary schooling. These are not the total costs paid by households—for example transport costs are not included, nor are costs for uniforms and text- books for examples, but these are the costs paid to schools for the services received. On the other hand, apart from fees, PTA (Parent-Teacher Associations) dues are also included, as these tend to fund operating expenses. All costs have been presented in US dollars, using the exchange rates at the time of the surveys. There is a clear ranking in costs between the various types of providers. For both primary and secondary schooling, in all but one country (Sierra Leone), public schools are cheaper than faith-inspired schools (in Swaziland, there is a virtual tie). As for other private schools, they are more expensive than both pub- lic and faith-inspired schools in all nine countries at the primary level, and in all but one country (Cameroon) at the secondary level. One should of course be careful about simple statistical comparisons, in that the reasons for differences in costs may be many. A more detailed analysis for Ghana and Burkina Faso of the private costs of primary education will be provided below. Still, it appears that Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Private Cost of Education 67 Table 6.1  Cost of School Fees and PTA Dues in Primary Schools US$ Residence area Welfare quintile Urban Rural Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Total Burundi, 2006 Public 2.5 1.5 1.3 1.5 1.5 1.4 2.2 1.5 Faith-inspired 0.3 2.0 4.3 0.9 0.8 1.4 0.7 1.9 Private secular 41.7 2.7 0.4 0.3 2.8 9.3 41.7 24.4 Total 8.3 1.5 1.4 1.5 1.5 1.4 4.8 1.9 Cameroon, 2007 Public 13.5 7.7 6.5 7.6 9.5 11.4 16.3 9.1 Faith-inspired 54.0 23.2 17.7 25.1 29.8 41.8 58.6 35.3 Private secular 108.4 44.0 22.1 43.9 63.2 80.0 139.0 98.3 Total 50.5 10.7 7.5 11.5 18.2 29.4 71.7 24.2 Ghana, 2005/06 Public 7.6 1.7 1.3 2.3 2.8 4.6 10.1 3.3 Faith-inspired 41.5 13.7 3.0 13.0 19.1 31.9 50.2 30.2 Private secular 56.2 19.7 20.0 28.3 31.7 40.6 63.7 41.9 Total 27.8 4.4 2.7 5.9 9.2 17.5 36.0 12.7 Sierra Leone, 2003/04 Public 3.7 1.7 1.6 1.7 2.1 2.5 5.3 2.7 Faith-inspired 2.9 1.3 1.1 1.5 2.0 2.1 3.6 1.9 Private secular 41.4 2.2 1.8 2.2 17.7 19.3 36.2 16.9 Total 6.0 1.5 1.3 1.6 2.6 3.5 8.9 3.3 Swaziland, 2009/10 Public 73.0 22.4 13.8 20.2 20.5 38.7 66.0 26.8 Faith-inspired 78.5 27.4 11.1 23.7 29.0 30.2 103.3 31.4 Private secular 409.7 122.9 20.2 51.6 69.1 98.8 439.8 218.5 Total 167.9 30.4 13.3 22.6 25.4 43.5 172.9 44.9 Kenya, 2005 Public 7.9 1.9 0.8 1.1 2.2 3.3 8.6 2.6 Faith-inspired 79.1 57.1 17.8 19.8 32.3 63.9 119.0 65.9 Private secular 128.8 72.3 15.3 33.9 58.8 71.5 149.2 97.4 Total 39.4 6.2 1.3 2.6 5.2 11.7 45.8 11.1 Malawi, 2004 Public 0.4 0 0 0 0.1 0.1 0.3 0.1 Faith-inspired 11.0 0.1 0 0.1 0.2 0.1 5.9 0.9 Private secular 107.4 9.6 0.2 1.2 8.3 8.0 103.9 72.0 Total 13.0 0.1 0 0.1 0.1 0.2 9.9 1.6 table continues next page Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 68 Private Cost of Education Table 6.1  Cost of School Fees and PTA Dues in Primary Schools (continued) US$ Residence area Welfare quintile Urban Rural Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Total Nigeria 2003/04 Public 10.2 3.9 4.0 2.8 3.7 8.1 13.5 6.6 Faith-inspired 15.6 5.1 4.1 16.0 3.6 15.9 14.7 11.4 Private secular 46.4 14.5 33.0 30.2 25.6 28.6 55.5 39.4 Total 21.7 4.8 7.8 7.6 6.8 12.5 27.7 13.4 Uganda, 2010 Public 19.2 3.7 2.0 2.5 3.7 5.6 19.7 4.8 Faith-inspired 71.7 22.1 5.3 9.6 19.7 36.9 75.5 31.4 Private secular 124.8 44.5 16.4 22.6 31.2 47.5 119.9 63.2 Total 71.2 11.4 3.1 5.4 9.4 17.2 70.6 17.6 Average Public 17.2 5.6 3.9 5.0 5.8 9.5 17.7 7.2 Faith-inspired 44.3 19.0 8.0 13.7 17.0 28.0 53.9 26.3 Private secular 133.1 41.6 16.2 26.8 38.6 50.5 143.6 84.0 Total 50.7 8.9 4.8 7.4 9.8 17.1 56.0 16.3 Source: Estimation from the various countries’ surveys. See Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. Table 6.2  Cost of School Fees and PTA Dues in Secondary Schools US$ Residence area Welfare quintile Urban Rural Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Total Burundi, 2006 Public 15.0 9.7 9.8 11.1 8.3 10.9 11.8 10.4 Faith-inspired 71.7 9.6 18.7 10.0 5.1 1.2 44.8 22.3 Private secular 48.2 25.5 20.4 9.7 26.4 25.0 49.8 42.3 Total 31.8 10.4 10.5 11.0 9.4 12.0 23.9 15.0 Cameroon, 2007 Public 46.9 37.4 33.2 36.4 39.6 42.3 49.9 41.5 Faith-inspired 184.2 142.1 137.4 98.0 135.9 167.5 219.3 175.1 Private secular 166.1 114.2 86.2 127.4 134.8 157.5 180.7 160.5 Total 98.4 44.1 36.7 47.3 60.6 77.3 104.7 73.9 Ghana, 2005/06 Public 42.0 13.7 8.0 10.2 28.2 31.6 53.1 26.9 Faith-inspired 69.0 55.3 84.6 51.9 44.8 56.7 85.0 64.8 Private secular 94.4 52.3 48.2 49.4 70.8 68.1 116.0 80.1 Total 54.9 19.5 12.7 16.8 34.0 40.3 71.1 37.6 table continues next page Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Private Cost of Education 69 Table 6.2  Cost of School Fees and PTA Dues in Secondary Schools (continued) US$ Residence area Welfare quintile Urban Rural Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Total Sierra Leone, 2003/04 Public 15.9 11.3 14.2 10.2 14.9 14.3 15.4 14.6 Faith-inspired 15.0 7.6 9.4 11.4 12.0 12.9 14.6 12.6 Private secular 28.1 4.6 14.2 40.3 25.5 9.8 22.1 22.6 Total 16.0 9.5 11.3 11.7 13.6 13.6 15.6 14.1 Swaziland, 2009/10 Public 189.7 103.1 31.8 68.6 88.8 143.5 258.4 114.1 Faith-inspired 212.8 94.1 9.9 57.8 60.7 148.6 220.3 112.6 Private secular 560.0 598.6 15.7 0 309.6 217.9 793.7 580.9 Total 264.7 121.7 26.9 66.5 95.5 146.7 359.9 143.9 Kenya, 2005 Public 147.8 92.6 50.2 75.1 93.4 105.5 136.9 101.7 Faith-inspired 109.9 109.5 133.7 83.9 84.2 92.0 150.8 109.6 Private secular 138.3 117.4 41.8 96.0 91.6 112.2 176.5 127.4 Total 141.3 95.6 53.0 77.9 92.5 105.1 145.0 105.4 Malawi, 2004 Public 29.6 14.1 11.0 15.8 14.3 16.4 22.8 17.7 Faith-inspired 93.1 14.5 37.8 45.0 22.3 17.8 68.1 51.3 Private secular 115.3 26.5 10.3 20.4 28.7 30.7 97.9 67.6 Total 66.9 16.3 12.4 16.8 17.0 19.1 51.4 31.5 Nigeria 2003/04 Public 23.6 19.5 9.4 14.9 16.4 22.5 32.9 21.6 Faith-inspired 52.5 21.6 20.5 24.0 12.9 41.9 70.8 44.3 Private secular 96.8 26.2 21.0 24.3 43.6 72.8 105.2 75.2 Total 38.0 20.2 10.7 15.8 19.5 30.3 48.7 29.8 Uganda, 2010 Public 160.8 73.3 36.7 41.3 53.8 91.3 181.5 88.6 Faith-inspired 274.8 131.6 57.6 126.9 43.0 188.2 257.9 162.8 Private secular 229.2 169.9 53.6 97.2 109.4 139.3 270.0 190.3 Total 207.6 115.6 42.4 61.2 72.9 115.2 241.1 139.1 Average Public 83.9 46.9 25.5 35.5 44.7 59.8 95.3 54.6 Faith-inspired 135.4 73.2 63.7 63.6 52.6 90.9 141.5 94.4 Private secular 184.5 141.9 38.9 58.1 105.1 104.2 226.5 168.4 Total 114.9 56.6 27.1 40.6 51.9 70.0 132.7 73.8 Source: Estimation from the various countries’ surveys. See Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 70 Private Cost of Education there are substantial differences in costs between FISs, private secular, and public providers in many of the countries. A few more comments are warranted for tables 6.1 and 6.2. First, there are large differences in costs between areas. Costs are higher in urban than in rural areas. Second, costs are higher for those in the top quintiles as compared to lower quintiles. This is not surprising, given that the costs paid are influenced by the ability to pay of households—wealthier households will tend to put their children in better and more expensive schools. Whether the poor pay less for what could be referred to as similar schooling, or at least for similar households, is however a question that requires more analysis than what is presented in tables 6.1 and 6.2, as will be discussed for Ghana and Burkina Faso in the next section. Additional Evidence for Ghana and Burkina Faso Comparative Cost of Faith-Inspired Education for Households in Ghana In the case of Ghana, the evidence presented in section 3.1. suggests that the cost of education in FISs is higher than that in public facilities. This section looks in more details at the cost of primary schools in Ghana. Table 6.3 provides basic statistics on the private cost of primary schooling for parents in the GLSS5. FISs are on average almost twice as expensive as public schools and private schools are even more expensive. This would suggest that the poor are not very likely to attend faith-inspired schools, at least in the GLSS5 sample, and this is confirmed by the benefit incidence analysis in chapter 5 [see, how- ever, the discussion comparing the Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire (CWIQ) and Ghana Living Standard Survey, Fifth Round (GLSS5) surveys in that chapter]. When considering only the school and registration fees, as well as contributions to PTAs, the differences are even larger proportionately. Yet aver- age costs do not control for a wide range of factors that could affect out-of- pocket expenditures. Table 6.3  Cost of Primary Education by Type of School, Divided by 10,000, 2005/06 (GHC) Transportation School and Contribution Uniform and Books and to and from Types of school registration fees to PTAs sport clothes school supplies School Public 14.2 1.0 4.5 7.6 4.0 Faith-inspired 41.3 1.7 6.7 13.4 10.9 Private secular 56.9 1.7 7.0 14.8 15.6 All 22.6 1.1 5.0 9.1 6.3 Foods, boards and Expenses on In-kind Other expenses & Total Types of school lodging at school extra classes expenses no breakdown expense Public 31.2 4.1 0.4 17.1 83.9 Faith-inspired 47.9 8.7 0.7 29.3 160.7 Private secular 49.5 13.5 1.0 51.5 211.3 All 35.2 5.8 0.5 23.3 108.9 Sources: Estimation based on GLSS5. See Adoho and Wodon 2013b. Amounts divided by 10,000. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Private Cost of Education 71 Even if faith-inspired primary schools are more expensive for households than public schools in Ghana, is it the case that they try to make their services afford- able to at least some of the poor? In order to try to measure the cost of education for various types of households, regression analysis is used. The costs being con- sidered include school fees and registration fees, contribution to parent/teachers associations, and expenses on extra classes received by the schools. The regressors are (1) the type of school attended by the child (this variable is instrumented as explained below); (2) the grade in school that the child is attending (with the first grade of the cycle being the reference category); (3) characteristics of the child— the age of the child, whether s/he is the oldest child in the household, and whether s/he lives with his or her biological family; (4) the geographic location of the child according to urban or rural status and the main areas in the country (with Accra as reference category); (5) the quintile of consumption per equivalent adult of the household in which the child lives together with interaction effects with the type of school attended; (6) whether the household head is male or female, and his/her age; and (7) the education level of the household head. As mentioned in chapter 3, there is concern that the choice of provider may be endogenous, that is it may depend itself on the cost of schooling. To avoid endogeneity bias the choice of provider is instrumented through a separate mul- tinomial logit regression that assesses the probability of seeking a specific pro- vider as a function of the same set of controls, plus the faith of the individual (faith may lead some to seek FISs, but this should not influence cost after such decision is made), and the leave-out-mean probability that individuals located in the same primary sampling unit (PSU) or area as the household choose one or another type of provider. This last variable measures neighborhood availability and quality or value effects—the more likely it is that other households rely on one specific type of school in a geographic area, the more likely it is that the individual will also rely on those schools, but this again should not influence cost for the individual after the decision of choosing a specific type of school has been made. This strategy of identifying the outcome regression through a leave-out mean PSU-level variable affecting the choice of facility by individuals was used by Ravallion and Wodon (2000) in work on schooling and child labor in Bangladesh and by Wodon (2000) in work on the impact of low-income energy policies on the probability of electricity disconnection in France. Key results from the second-stage tobit regression on the cost of education are shown in table 6.4 (the full regression results are in appendix G, and bootstrap- ping is used to correct standard errors for the two-stage procedure). It appears that there are no differences in costs between public and faith-inspired facilities once controls are introduced. Private facilities are however more expensive, as expected, and with few differences by quintile, given that the quintile effects and the interacted effects with private providers tend to offset each others. An important finding in table 6.4 is that there is a clear differentiation in costs paid by quintiles of well-being, with households from higher quintiles paying more than households from lower quintiles, especially in faith-inspired and pub- lic facilities (given the counteracting interaction effects for private facilities). This Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 72 Private Cost of Education Table 6.4  Selected Correlates of the Cost of Education, Ghana, 2005/06 Variables Coefficient t-stats Provider (instrumented) Private secular 4.90*** 3.388 Faith-inspired –6.60 –0.865 Level of well-being Quintile 2 0.21 0.967 Quintile 3 0.41* 1.789 Quintile 4 0.68*** 2.760 Quintile 5 1.25*** 4.129 Interaction effects Private secular x Quintile 2 –1.50 –0.993 Private secular x Quintile 3 –1.77 –1.215 Private secular x Quintile 4 –2.56* –1.774 Private secular x Quintile 5 –3.46** –2.392 Faith-inspired x Quintile 2 6.04 0.851 Faith-inspired x Quintile 3 5.79 0.749 Faith-inspired x Quintile 4 8.35 1.099 Faith-inspired x Quintile 5 8.35 1.090 Sources: Estimation based on GLSS5. See Adoho and Wodon 2013b. Note: Statistical significance levels: *=10 percent, **=5 percent, ***=1 percent. pattern could in principle be consistent with a Robin Hood pricing hypothesis in faith-inspired schools whereby differentiated subsidies for the poor would be paid for by asking higher fees from other groups. Such a pricing strategy would probably not be sustainable under competitive markets, since subsidies for the poor would lead not only to poor students relying on FISs as compared to other facilities but also to fewer nonpoor students, which would ultimately be unsus- tainable in the absence of other funding or cost reduction mechanisms. But in a segmented market with different types of schools providing different types of services, it might be sustainable, as better-off households that value the faith affili- ation of a school may be willing to pay more for that school than for another school. At the same time, the results in table 6.4 are also consistent with a simpler hypothesis whereby better-off households might simply select schools that are more expensive and provide better quality, or may be located in areas where the overall cost of schools is higher in general, and the fact that there are no differ- ences between faith-inspired and public schools would not tend to specifically favor the Robin Hood pricing strategy hypothesis. Cost, School Inputs, and Performance of Education Services in Burkina Faso Consider now education costs in Burkina Faso. Results from the 2007 QUIBB survey in table 6.5 suggest that more than one in four children aged 7–12 not in primary school are not attending due to the financial burden that schooling repre- sents (many fees were abolished in 2007, but this may not be reflected yet in the survey). After the reason that school is “not necessary” which may indicate a lack Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Private Cost of Education 73 of quality in schooling or a lack of jobs despite better schooling, cost was the sec- ond main reason given for nonattendance. The percentages are the same for rural and urban children and are fairly consistent across economic groups, though lower for the wealthiest as expected (the large proportion of parents mentioning “not of school age” is due to late entry practiced for a nonnegligible share of children; note that the statistics in table 6.5 are computed among those not enrolled in school). The qualitative fieldwork conducted in a few areas confirms that despite the reforms implemented in 2007, the cost of schooling remains a constraint for some families in Burkina Faso. A significant number of respondents listed the cost of education as a disadvantage of their school (23.3 percent in public schools, 35.5 percent in Franco-Arab schools, and 20 percent in Christian schools). The smaller share in Christian schools probably reflects the larger average incomes of respon- dents sending their children to those schools. When asked in a separate question if they were satisfied with the level of the fees at their school, while 83.3 percent of Christian school parents said that they were very satisfied or satisfied, the pro- portion was only 42.0 percent for parents at Islamic schools. Table 6.6 provides Table 6.5  Reason for Not Attending School in Burkina Faso, Children Aged 7–12 (FCFA) percent Residence area Welfare quintiles Q1 Q5 Urban Rural (poorest) Q2 Q3 Q4 (richest) Total Failed exam 4.0 1.3 1.0 0.9 2.1 1.4 2.5 1.4 Completed school 0 0.1 0 0 0 0.4 0 0.1 Working 1.2 2.4 1.8 2.9 2.9 1.4 1.8 2.4 Too expensive 27.4 27.1 24.6 29.4 30.8 28.0 19.9 27.2 Not necessary, refused 36.1 29.6 24.6 29.5 29.9 34.1 42.4 29.8 Too far away 3.6 12.4 20.5 8.3 9.5 6.8 7.1 12.1 No canteen 0 0.3 0.4 0 0 0.1 0 0.3 Illness 6.2 1.6 0.8 2.3 2.3 1.8 3.7 1.7 Marriage/pregnancy 0.4 0.1 0 0 0 0 0.6 0.1 Not of school age 21.1 25.3 26.3 26.3 22.4 26.0 21.9 25.1 All 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Source: Estimation based on QUIBB 2007. Table 6.6  Average Annual School Expenses per Child, Burkina Faso Fieldwork Islamic schools Christian schools Public schools School fees Rural: 8,000 Protestant: Rural: 8,000; — Urban: 15,000–30,000 Urban: 15,000–30,000 Catholic: Rural: 30,000; Urban: 35,000 Uniforms 2,204 4,433 1,385 Transportation 0 4,545 0 Books and supplies 5,648 16,350 2,708 Source: Burkina Faso fieldwork. See Gemignani and Wodon2013. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 74 Private Cost of Education data on the costs for parents to send their children to the various types of schools represented in the fieldwork. School fees in the Catholic schools are set at about 30,000 FCFA in rural areas and 35,000 FCFA in urban areas. Fees at the other faith-inspired schools vary significantly. The rural schools had much lower fees at about 7,500 FCFA to 9,000 FCFA for both Islamic and Christian schools, but the urban schools charged between 16,000 FCFA and 40,000 FCFA. In addition, parents have to pay additional costs for uniforms, transportation, and books and supplies. Almost 40 percent of parents in the Islamic schools stated that a major disad- vantage faced by their schools was the parents’ inability to pay school fees, and they linked this inability to lower salaries of teachers and subsequent quality issues. They also stated that when children leave the Islamic schools, this is most often for economic reasons. Indeed the most common reason given for boys leav- ing a school was financial difficulties (48.4 percent of those leaving). Results were similar for public schools with 46.7 percent of parents saying that boys leave school due to financial hardship (in the case of girls, the figures were lower, with 40 percent of parents in Muslim and public schools citing marriage as the main reason leading girls to end their schooling.) In their evaluation of the prob- lems faced by their schools, several parents as well as school administrators stated that although they felt that Franco-Arab schools have benefitted the community, parents were having ongoing problems in caring for the basic needs of children who attended the school, including affording clothing, food, medical needs, and especially school fees. As the director of a Franco-Arab school stated: “These children come from underprivileged situations where the majority of parents are illiterate and poor. They are not able to nourish them, look after them, and to suitably provide education for them and this is often the source of school aban- donment.” Over a third of parents in these schools suggest that there is a need to lower school fees to a level that parents would be able to afford, so that children may continue their education. School officials are well aware of the fact that parents in Franco-Arab schools often do not pay the required amount of school fees. In addition to the financial difficulties faced by parents, they suggested that another contributing factor may be the popular conception, linked to the history of Islamic schooling, that an Islamic education should be provided free or at very low cost to the Muslim community. One parent stated that some community members “see only the religious teaching, as in the Qur’anic schools, and their contributions to equip the school with resources are tiny in spite of the sensitizing efforts of the founder.” Catholic schools are in a different position because their clientele tends to be better off. This makes it feasible for the schools to provide education opportuni- ties to some of those in need. But in order to finance the schools, the fees are set quite high and are not affordable by the poor in Burkina Faso, except the few that may be subsidized. It is because wealthier families are willing to pay for the qual- ity of the education received that the Catholic schools may provide assistance to some families that cannot afford their school fees. The difference between Catholic and Islamic schools appears as well in the data from the Ministry of Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Private Cost of Education 75 Table 6.7  School Inputs by Type of School, Burkina Faso 2008/09 percent Private Private Private Private Public Secular Catholic Islamic Protestant schools Teacher qualifications Teaching assistant 67.3 13.8 32.4 67.7 0.3 Qualified teaching asst. 21.6 57.0 1.4 20.5 51.0 Qualified teacher 9.4 28.4 0.3 11.0 47.4 Head teacher 0.7 0.4 0 0 0.2 Other/missing 0.9 0.4 65.9 0.8 1.1 Total 100 100 100 100 100 School facilities Canteen 25.8 59.7 31.8 45.4 75.9 Potable water 70.1 67.9 16.5 63.2 46.5 Electricity 53.8 47.0 7.2 41.4 9.1 Toilets 87.5 85.1 32.2 80.9 68.2 Number of manuals and textbooks per child Math 0.53 0.59 0.21 0.53 0.77 Geography. 0.34 0.45 0.11 0.34 0.53 History 0.42 0.50 0.14 0.42 0.59 Reading 0.83 0.91 0.48 0.91 1.25 Natural science 0.50 0.59 0.18 0.50 0.71 Source: Ministry of Education of Burkina Faso. Education on the characteristics of the schools (table 6.7). Teachers in public and Catholic schools have on average the highest levels of qualification. For example, the Instituteur Adjoint Certifié (IAC) or Instituteur Certifié (IC) certification is held by 98.4 percent of teachers in public schools and 85.4 percent in Catholic schools. The ability of Catholic schools to attract qualified teachers may be related to the fact that they receive state assistance for teacher salaries. By con- trast only 31.5 percent of teachers in Protestant schools have the IAC or IC teaching credentials, with 67 percent of the teachers in those schools listed as teaching assistants (Instituteur Adjoint [IA] level). Teachers in Islamic schools have even lower rates of formal training with only 1.7 percent having the IAC or IC level, 32.4 percent the IA level, and 62.8 percent other credentials (possibly a college degree but also a high school diploma). Table 6.7 suggests fewer systematic differences between public, Catholic, and Protestant schools in school amenities. Public schools are more likely to have a canteen (75.9 percent compared to 59.7 percent in Catholic and 45.4 percent in Protestant schools). But drinking water is more often available in Catholic and Protestant schools (67.9 percent and 63.2 percent respectively, as compared to 46.5 percent in public schools) as are toilet facilities (85.1 percent and 80.9 percent, as compared to 68.2 percent in public schools). The largest difference here is the fact that only 9.1 percent of public schools have access to ­ electricity, as compared to 47.0 percent and 41.4 percent respectively for Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 76 Private Cost of Education Catholic and Protestant schools. This likely indicates neighborhood effects, with Catholic and Protestant schools more likely to be located in urban and wealthier areas than in rural areas. Islamic schools are the worst off in terms of basic ameni- ties, with less than a third of the schools having canteens and toilets, 16.5 percent having drinking water, and 7.2 percent electricity. Islamic schools also have a smaller number of textbooks and teaching manuals per students than other schools. By contrast Catholic, Protestant, and secular private schools have similar textbook/student ratios, and public schools tend to do best. For mathematics for example, there are almost five children per book in the Islamic schools as compared to two children per boom in the other types of schools. On the other hand Islamic schools tend to have lower student/teacher ratios (25 students per teacher in Islamic schools, compared to 46 in Catholic schools and 50 in Protestant and public schools), which may reflect the fact that some of the schools may be located in poorer and more isolated areas. Thus, while Islamic schools employ teachers that tend to have lower certifications, they employ more of them per student. Conversations in the qualitative fieldwork with school administrators and government officials suggested the need for better trained staff in Islamic schools. They pointed out that the salaries of teachers in Islamic schools are low in com- parison to those in public and Catholic schools. Discussions with school leaders confirmed this, with Islamic teaching staff in the three schools earning around 25,000 FCFA per month, compared to 95,000–125,000 FCFA in public and Catholic schools. While Islamic school teachers sometimes benefit from room and board, their total compensation remains low. By contrast, a director at a Catholic school described the large investments made in teacher quality in the school and felt that this was the reason for higher student achievement in the school. Beyond teacher training, the school also maintained a system for regular monitoring of teacher quality made possible thanks to the resources of the school. Statistics on student achievement are available for the Catholic school system. These show that 81.3 percent of Catholic primary school students passed the Certificat d’Etudes Primaires (CEP) examination in 2009, compared to 58.4 per- cent for Burkina Faso overall. Similar statistics on test scores in Islamic schools are however not available. A very small number of Islamic schools (six) were included in the 2009 PASEC study which reports a negative correlation between Islamic schools and test scores. Results from the qualitative fieldwork suggest however a great deal of variability in test scores between Islamic schools. At one of the Franco-Arab schools visited, 88.5 percent of students had passed the CEP examination, comparing favorably with the national average and surpassing the average for the Catholic schools. This school was well known for the academic success of its students. At a second large Franco-Arab school, the CEP pass rate was however only 30 percent, and as low as 18.8 percent for girls. Finally, data on student passing rates by type of school are also available and provided in table 6.8 by grades. Except for a lower Catholic CM1 passing rate, the passing rates for Catholic and secular private schools are consistently higher Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Private Cost of Education 77 Table 6.8  Passing Rate in Primary Schools by Grade, Burkina Faso 2008/09 percent Measure Private Secular Private Catholic Private Islamic Private Protestant Public Pass Rate CP1 87.2 88.6 73.0 85.1 86.8 Pass Rate CP2 96.6 94.7 71.5 87.6 87.3 Pass Rate CE1 86.0 88.2 64.5 80.7 82.6 Pass Rate CE2 92.7 94.7 64.3 87.2 83.7 Pass Rate CM1 86.9 75.2 61.1 73.7 73.6 Source: Ministry of Education of Burkina Faso. than for other schools. Protestant and public schools have similar passing rates, while Islamic schools have lower passing rates. While passing rates are not neces- sarily measures of performance, the information provided by passing rates together with other data tend to suggest better performance in Catholic and private secular schools than in public and Protestant schools, with Islamic schools lagging somewhat behind. However, because this information does not take into account any information on the characteristics of the student population (Islamic schools tend to welcome poorer students, as mentioned previously), this is not necessarily indicative of the performance of the schools themselves. But the fact that both student attainment and achievement tend to be higher in Catholic schools helps in explaining why they are able to attract students from wealthier background. Conclusion Cross-country evidence suggests a clear ranking in the private costs of education between the various types of providers for both primary and secondary schooling. In most countries, public schools tend to be cheaper on average, followed by FISs, and then private secular schools. At the same time, there is also substantial diver- sity today in how FISs provide education services in African countries, and whom they serve, and this is also observed in Ghana and Burkina Faso. FISs often aim to serve all—but many also have a commitment to serve the poor and vulnerable. The extent to which they are actually able to do so (given their resources) remains an open question. Even if FISs do benefit from staffs who are dedicated, some of whom may be able and willing to work for very low pay, running a school does cost money, and financial sustainability requires funding. When FISs do not benefit from state support, or when they benefit from lower levels of state support than public facilities, they need to rely on cost recovery from students to break even. When higher cost recovery is required from users, it is more difficult for FISs to serve the poor, because the cost of their services becomes less afford- able for those in need. Once household characteristics are taken into account, econometric analysis carried for Ghana suggests no clear differentiation in costs between faith-inspired and public schools, but better-off households do tend to pay more than the very Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 78 Private Cost of Education poor even after a range of controls are accounted for. This could be in principle consistent with Robin Hood pricing on the part of FISs, but also with other explanations, including that better-off households simply purchase better ser- vices, or live in areas where the services are pricier. In Burkina Faso, there is some evidence than Christian schools, and especially Catholic schools, may on average serve the better-off more, even if they do make some efforts to make their ser- vices available to some among the poor. These schools also tend to have better student attainment and achievement results. By contrast, many Islamic schools tend to serve children who are poor, which is not too surprising, given that Muslim populations are indeed poorer (in both countries). When they are unable or unwilling to raise fees, the quality of at least some of the faith-inspired schools may be lower than it would be otherwise, with teachers being paid significantly less in Islamic schools, as compared to public and Catholic schools. But these Islamic schools still provide value for parents—indeed, as discussed in the next chapter, a key reason for parents to send their children to faith-inspired schools is the fact that the schools, and especially Islamic school, integrate religion educa- tion in their curriculum. This emphasis placed on religion, and more generally on values and morality, is important for many parents, and this is the topic of focus in the next chapter. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 CHAPTER 7 Satisfaction and Preferences Introduction In the previous three chapters, the focus was in large part on the supply side of faith-inspired service delivery, since the market, share reach to the poor, and cost of faith-inspired schools (FISs) depend in large part on decisions made by the staffs and managers of FISs, even if they also represent some form of equilibrium between supply and demand in each of the local markets in which FISs operate. With this last chapter, the focus shifts more to the demand side of service deliv- ery, with a discussion of the satisfaction of households with the services they receive, and the reasons that lead them to rely on faith-inspired facilities. The perception in the literature is that FISs have a comparative advantage, or that they provide special values through their services, in part because of their commitment to quality as well as serving the poor, both of which are made fea- sible through the dedication of their staffs. Even with limited resources, FISs may be able to provide services of quality, including to the poor. Still, as was the case for questions related to market share, reach to the poor, and cost, systematic evidence on the comparative advantages of FISs and satisfaction with their ser- vices remains thin. Measuring satisfaction is not easy as analysis based on exit interviews or national surveys suffers from self-selection bias since students/ parents who choose to go to a particular facility are more likely to be satisfied with that facility. Much of the analysis presented in this section also suffers from this selection bias. Beyond the measurement of satisfaction rates, many other questions remain unanswered. For example, making the link with the previous chapter on cost and funding, if students/parents are more satisfied with FISs, is this because of lower costs or despite higher costs? Answers to such questions are likely to be country- and context-specific. The specific case of education is especially complex, given the differences between various types of schools, and especially Islamic schools. Islamic schools are perhaps not simply FISs providing services like any other organization. They are distinct from an Islamic point of view from other schools. As noted by Sikand (2005, 2008a, 2008b, 2009) in the case of South Asia, if the main objective of madrasas remains that of providing a religious education to future Islamic Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   79 80 Satisfaction and Preferences scholars (with an emphasis on religious knowledge that is stronger than what is found in Christian schools), this should be one of the yardsticks according to which their performance should be evaluated. In this respect, madrasas may actually perform rather well. This implies that madrasas are not simply one player in a larger education services marketplace. One could probably argue that becoming just one such player is precisely what some madrasa leaders would like to avoid, and why they resist calls for reforms to include more secular topics in the curriculum, since adopting such reforms could make their services less dis- tinct and thus potentially less appealing to those who do want an Islamic ­ educational environment for their children. The situation is slightly different in Sub-Saharan Africa, but it is clear that faith is a key reason for households to choose faith-inspired schools. Another difficulty is the distinction between satisfaction and performance. In order to improve human development outcomes, performance is what matters ultimately, and more so than satisfaction per se, even if both are likely to be cor- related. Performance also tends to be more objective, while satisfaction is more subjective. There is some evidence in the education literature that faith-inspired providers may offer services of higher or equal quality to those provided by pub- lic schools (for example, Allcott and Ortega 2009; Asadullah et al. 2009; Altonji et al. 2005; Cox and Jimenez 1990; Evans and Schwab 1995; González and Arévalo 2005; Hoxby 1994; Hsieh and Urquiola 2006; Parra Osorio and Wodon 2011). In Sub-Saharan Africa, Wodon and Ying (2009) find that in Sierra Leone faith-inspired schools perform slightly better than public schools after controls are taken into account for the type of students enrolled, while Backiny-Yetna and Wodon (2009b) find similar performance between faith-inspired and public schools in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Discussing the satisfaction of users with services, as well as the reasons for choosing FISs and their performance, is a tall order. The emphasis in this chapter will be more on satisfaction and the reasons for choosing FISs or preferences, as opposed to performance. Only one brief case study on the performance of Ghana’s schools will be provided, based on the literacy and numeracy of students as perceived by parents. Because an understanding of the satisfaction with vari- ous types of facilities, as well as of the reasons for choosing specific facilities, is difficult to gain with the limited information available in national surveys, this chapter relies more than the previous chapters on the fieldwork carried in April- June 2010 in Ghana and Burkina Faso. It should be emphasized again that the sample size of the fieldwork was limited (see appendix D for a discussion), so that the results in the various tables in this chapter based on the qualitative field- work should be considered as indicative only. The structure of the chapter is the same as in the previous three. Before pre- senting detailed evidence for Ghana and Burkina Faso, cross-country evidence from household surveys on the satisfaction of users with various types of facilities is presented in section 2. Section 3 then looks at Ghana and Burkina Faso in more depth. A brief conclusion follows. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Satisfaction and Preferences 81 Cross-Country Evidence While there are statements about FISs providing better-quality services resulting in more satisfied students or parents, and possibly also in terms of better out- comes (attainment and achievement), much of the evidence for developing countries comes from qualitative work and small-scale surveys. Evidence from national surveys remains thin. This section relies on data from seven of the sur- veys used previously (see table 7.1) in order to measure rates of satisfaction with the education services provided FISs as compared to other private and public facilities. The results are provided in tables 7.2 and 7.3 for primary and secondary edu- cation. In the case of primary education, with the exception of Burundi, FISs again appear to enjoy higher satisfaction rates than public facilities. For the popu- lation as a whole, the satisfaction rate among FISs is almost four to five percent- age points above that of public providers in the two focus countries (Burkina Faso and Ghana), while it is higher by more than 10 points in Niger, almost 20 points in Senegal, and about 40 points or even more in Mali and the Republic of Congo. In Burundi, the satisfaction rate with FISs is eight points below that for public facilities. As to the comparison of FISs with other private facilities, FISs appear to have the upper hand in one country (Mali), while other private provid- ers do better in four countries (Burundi, Ghana, Senegal, and the Republic of Congo), with the last country (Niger) being a tie. Satisfaction rates are higher in urban than rural areas, and they also tend to increase with the quintile of well- being of households—this is the case in all countries, except Niger, but for that country satisfaction rates are so high that interpretation is more difficult. For secondary education, the differences between FISs and public schools tend to be small in the population as a whole for Burkina Faso, Burundi, Ghana, and Niger but in the other three countries, FISs do better than public schools. In three countries (Burundi, Ghana, and Niger) private secular schools tend to have the highest rates of satisfaction. FISs perform best in Burkina Faso, Senegal, the Republic of Congo, and Mali. This suggests that the comparative performance of FISs is stronger at the secondary than at the primary level. What are the main reasons for nonsatisfaction? Even if there are slight differ- ences between the surveys, the questionnaires typically identify the following potential reasons: lack of books/supplies, poor teaching, lack of teachers, facilities in bad condition, overcrowding, lack of furniture, and other problems. In a few Table 7.1  Countries in the Sample with Data on Satisfaction in Education Modules Country (survey name) Year of implementation Country (survey name) Year of implementation Burundi (QUIBB) 2006 Niger (QUIBB) 2005 Burkina Faso (QUIBB) 2007 Congo, Rep. (QUIBB) 2005 Ghana (CWIQ) 2003 Senegal (ESPS) 2005/06 Mali (QUIBB) 2006 Source: World Bank data. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 82 Satisfaction and Preferences Table 7.2  Satisfaction Rates with Primary Education Services percent Residence area Welfare quintile Urban Rural Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Total Burkina Faso, 2007 Public 86.0 82.3 76.3 82.0 82.8 83.3 86.9 83.0 Faith-inspired 92.1 79.4 56.8 61.8 87.4 84.6 91.6 84.5 Private secular 91.3 73.8 49.0 87.3 67.9 81.7 93.5 88.6 Total 87.7 82.0 75.3 81.7 82.6 83.3 88.3 83.4 Burundi, 2006 Public 51.8 34.6 29.6 36.3 35.4 36.5 43.0 35.6 Faith-inspired 75.4 24.2 11.6 29.2 31.8 15.2 49.3 25.3 Private secular 75.7 53.6 78.2 27.7 60.6 63.2 76.5 66.5 Total 55.3 34.5 29.9 35.6 35.5 36.3 45.3 35.9 Ghana, 2003 Public 80.26 61.37 56.9 67.8 71.1 74.1 73.4 67.7 Faith-inspired 81.66 59.49 61.1 70.1 76.0 76.5 75.3 72.0 Private secular 87.67 73.65 69.7 77.8 82.2 85.4 89.2 83.5 Total 82.99 62.66 57.9 69.3 73.8 77.8 79.6 71.3 Senegal, 2005 Public 75.2 52.3 57.2 55.4 57.5 65.1 77.2 62.1 Faith-inspired 92.3 68.3 55.8 72.1 77.9 88.0 96.1 84.7 Private secular 91.5 68.4 68.6 79.0 68.2 93.1 93.4 90.1 Total 79.1 53.1 57.2 56.5 58.7 68.9 82.8 65.6 Congo, Rep., 2005 Public 20.4 12.2 16.0 16.0 17.3 17.8 16.9 16.7 Faith-inspired 62.6 14.9 44.0 35.8 56.3 58.5 52.5 51.8 Private secular 69.7 30.8 78.8 43.1 62.4 64.8 68.2 63.0 Total 37.7 14.2 22.9 20.9 29.9 33.1 44.8 28.7 Niger, 2007 Public 82.9 88.9 87.3 88.3 91.9 87.2 82.8 87.6 Faith-inspired 99.7 100.0 100.0 100.0 99.6 100.0 100.0 99.9 Private secular 99.3 99.7 100.0 100.0 98.9 99.6 99.6 99.6 Total 88.4 92.1 90.5 91.3 93.9 91.0 89.5 91.2 Mali, 2006 Public 54.3 37.6 40.0 33.5 35.4 48.1 65.2 45.0 Faith-inspired 94.6 81.2 31.3 100.0 80.1 89.5 95.9 91.1 Private secular 88.8 48.9 30.5 50.5 64.7 76.4 90.6 80.0 Total 62.6 38.5 39.5 34.7 37.4 52.0 73.9 50.4 Average Public 64.4 52.8 51.9 54.2 55.9 58.9 63.6 56.8 Faith-inspired 85.5 61.1 51.5 67.0 72.7 73.2 80.1 72.8 Private secular 86.3 64.1 67.8 66.5 72.1 80.6 87.3 81.6 Total 70.5 53.9 53.3 55.7 58.8 63.2 72.0 60.9 Source: Estimates based on national household surveys. See Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Satisfaction and Preferences 83 Table 7.3  Satisfaction Rates with Secondary Education Services percent Residence area Welfare quintile Urban Rural Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Total Burkina Faso, 2007 Public 82.2 82.5 87.7 89.4 83.2 75.2 84.0 82.3 Faith-inspired 85.0 83.3 100.0 14.6 72.0 75.7 91.3 84.7 Private secular 84.2 48.3 100.0 56.8 54.3 68.4 86.2 81.3 Total 83.2 80.8 89.0 82.4 79.6 74.0 85.4 82.3 Burundi, 2006 Public 61.0 36.1 27.3 42.9 35.1 37.6 46.8 39.3 Faith-inspired 85.6 27.3 11.3 69.7 0 51.0 56.9 38.9 Private secular 60.8 55.2 36.5 50.6 58.4 38.1 64.9 59.5 Total 61.9 36.2 25.8 43.8 36.4 37.7 52.0 41.7 Ghana, 2003 Public 81.7 74.93 71.7 77.7 80.3 81.1 82.8 79.7 Faith-inspired 83.27 60 48.8 72.9 89.1 72.5 82.0 76.4 Private secular 87.25 67.85 74.1 71.6 86.6 80.7 89.6 82.7 Total 82.47 73.76 70.9 77.0 81.3 80.8 83.8 79.9 Senegal, 2005 Public 72.3 56.1 54.2 61.2 63.4 69.3 75.5 67.3 Faith-inspired 90.3 54.3 36.4 70.3 82.1 75.9 95.1 84.2 Private secular 81.9 54.6 57.0 61.6 77.6 79.3 85.7 80.8 Total 75.1 56.0 53.7 61.6 64.9 70.7 79.2 69.9 Congo, Rep., 2005 Public 20.0 14.2 22.4 19.0 19.1 18.8 14.6 19.0 Faith-inspired 73.4 — 40.2 79.0 86.4 84.1 78.9 73.4 Private secular 60.9 43.2 71.7 49.4 67.7 55.9 59.7 59.4 Total 30.2 17.6 25.9 24.0 29.5 30.5 31.3 28.3 Niger, 2007 Public 80.2 96.9 97.3 89.0 94.7 83.5 82.0 86.8 Faith-inspired 85.4 100.0 — — 100.0 100.0 75.1 87.6 Private secular 97.8 — 100.0 100.0 100.0 83.7 98.4 97.8 Total 84.8 96.9 97.4 89.5 95.0 83.7 87.3 88.7 Mali, 2006 Public 53.4 45.5 56.5 40.0 47.2 46.4 58.1 51.3 Faith-inspired 100.0 77.5 — — 100.0 47.1 — 83.9 Private secular 84.8 23.6 34.1 72.8 39.8 56.4 91.5 78.5 Total 57.3 44.8 55.7 41.8 47.5 47.2 63.2 54.2 Average Public 64.4 58.0 59.6 59.9 60.4 58.8 63.4 60.8 Faith-inspired 86.1 67.1 47.3 61.3 75.7 72.3 79.9 75.6 Private secular 79.7 48.8 67.6 66.1 69.2 66.1 82.3 77.1 Total 67.9 58.0 59.8 60.0 62.0 60.7 68.9 63.6 Source: Estimates based on national household surveys. See Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. Note: — = not available. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 84 Satisfaction and Preferences countries, cost is also included as a potential reason, but not in most. At the pri- mary level, the lack of books and supplies is the main reason for nonsatisfaction in virtually all countries. Overcrowding and lack of teachers are also often men- tioned, as well as many of the other problems. In secondary schools, the lack of books/supplies also comes first in most countries, but the lack of teachers comes up more often as a reason for nonsatisfaction. It should be emphasized that the fact that the cost of schooling is not a major complaint does not mean that it is not an issue. The questions are asked only to parents who have children in school—among parents who have children of school age who are not enrolled, cost is often the main or at least a key reason for not being in school, but this is not shown here since that information cannot be disaggregated according to the type of provider given that the children are not in school. Additional Evidence for Ghana and Burkina Faso Reasons for Choosing FISs in Ghana What are the reasons for choosing faith-inspired schools as they emerge from the qualitative and small sample data on satisfaction with education services in Ghana? As shown in table 7.4 among parents sending their children to Christian schools, faith is a key motivation for half (50.0 percent) of the parents. The share is even higher at 75.0 percent for parents sending their children to Islamic schools (37.5 percent of parents in Islamic schools also mentioned that learning Arabic was a motivation for enrolling their children in the school, probably because Arabic is needed for reading the Qur’an). This importance of religion is observed among almost all of those who choose faith-inspired schools, as a few quotes from the in-depth interviews illustrate: “The school is strict and disci- plines the children. Apart from academic subjects, Christian values are instilled Table 7.4  Main Reasons for Choosing the School, Qualitative Fieldwork, 2010 percent Parents at Islamic Parents at Christian Parents at secular schools schools schools Location 20.8 16.7 37.5 Religion 75.0 50.0 6.3 Morals, values, behavior — 29.2 — To learn Arabic 37.5 — — To learn English 4.2 — — Teacher quality, discipline 4.2 33.3 25.0 Academic results 4.2 16.7 25.0 Child’s future schooling/job 4.2 4.2 — Familiarity with the school 16.7 16.7 18.8 Low or no fees 4.2 — 31.3 Low cost books and supplies 4.2 — — Teaching contents/curriculum 29.2 4.2 — Source: Ghana fieldwork. See Shojo and Wodon 2013. Note: Multiple answers allowed. — = not available. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Satisfaction and Preferences 85 in the children, and that makes them obedient” (Parent at a public Christian school); “Because this school is an Islamic school, they teach Arabic and English. That is why I prefer this school to secular schools” (Parent at a public Islamic school); “Children in the other schools are not as disciplined like the children here. The fear of the Lord is taught and also the church supports us. I want my children to be brought up in the Christian faith” (Parent at a private Christian school). In addition to the role of faith and values, quality also mattered, especially for parents relying on Christian schools. For some of these parents, quality could lead to changing school. As a parent who withdrew her daughter from a Christian school to send her to a better public Islamic school: “I am Christian. My daughter was in a Christian school before but I removed her and sent her to this school, because teachers are very good and this school produces a lot of children who pass the national examination and go to secondary schools.” Another question was asked about the advantages of the school chosen by parents (table 7.5). Faith and values came again strongly as key advantages among those sending their children to Christian and Islamic schools. Among parents interviewed in secular schools on the other hand, location and the absence of school fees were the most important reasons for the choice of the schools. As a parent sending her children to a secular school explains: “The school is a community school, so it is open for community. I want to keep an eye on the children since it is close to my house. Additionally, I don’t have to worry about school fees.” Still another question was asked to parents on what children should learn in school (table 7.6). In secular schools, mathematics and science as well as English came up as important areas of study. These areas are also important for parents sending their children to faith-inspired schools, but less so. Again, parents in Table 7.5  Advantages of the School You Selected, Qualitative Fieldwork, 2010 percent Parents at Parents at Parents at Christian faith-inspired Parents at Islamic schools schools schools secular schools No or low fees — — — 18.8 Low cost books and supplies — — — 12.5 Free or low cost meals — — — 6.3 Religion 66.7 62.5 64.6 — Morals, values, behavior, attitudes 50.0 83.3 66.7 — To learn Arabic 50.0 — 25.0 — To learn English 20.8 — 10.4 — Leader quality — — — 6.3 Teacher quality, discipline, seriousness — 8.3 4.2 — Test results, advantage for children’s future — 4.2 2.1 — Source: Ghana fieldwork. See Shojo and Wodon 2013. Note: Multiple answers allowed. The sum of the answers for secular schools is below 100 percent because many parents did not identify specific comparative advantages. — = not available. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 86 Satisfaction and Preferences Table 7.6  What Should Children Learn at School? Qualitative Fieldwork, 2010 percent Parents at Parents at Parents at Parents at Islamic Christian faith-inspired secular schools schools schools schools General knowledge 16.7 25.0 20.8 12.5 Religion 4.2 20.8 12.5 12.5 Morals, values, behavior, attitudes 29.2 54.2 41.7 25.0 Literacy (reading and writing) 4.2 4.2 4.2 18.8 Mathematics and science 58.3 58.3 58.3 87.5 Arabic 45.8 0 22.9 0 English 70.8 54.2 62.5 62.5 Life skills (health, hygiene, sexuality) 4.2 4.2 4.2 0 Vocational training (farming, tailoring, computer etc.) 12.5 4.2 8.3 18.8 Other language skills 20.8 8.3 14.6 18.8 Source: Ghana fieldwork. See Shojo and Wodon 2013. Note: Multiple answers allowed. faith-inspired schools regard morals, values, behavior, and attitudes as a key area of learning, and much more so than parents in secular schools. As stated by a parent relying on a private Christian school: “When children attend religious schools, there is a difference in their behavior. My children’s behavior is different from those who attend public schools.” A parent relying on a private Islamic school stated: “When the children complete this type of school, they will be knowledgeable in both academic subjects and Islamic studies.” By contrast, at least some parents sending their children to secular schools do not approve of religion’s influence in school. One such parent explained that “Education is gen- eral. There is no ideology or religious group interference, which could frustrate teachers and children”; another argued that “Some religious schools sometimes force their beliefs and doctrines on children so it is advantageous for me to let my child go to a secular school so that she learns what everybody believes in.” Faith also matters for principals and school owners. It is a key reason for estab- lishing faith-inspired schools. Apart from providing education to local children by the local community, the reasons for setting up faith-inspired schools include raising good Muslims or Christians, and teaching both religious and secular top- ics. As a private Christian school owner put it: “We did not have any private religious school in the area before. So we decided to set up a religious school. This school was established in 1991. All of the teachers are local. That is good for children.” A private Islamic school owner emphasized the importance of religious education: “We lacked schools in this area. The school was established in 2002. Muslim communities around this area were very vulnerable. We decided to give people empowerment and education. We educate Islamic faith, values and prac- tice to be a good Muslim.” The same emphasis was noted by a head teacher in another Islamic school: “Parents saw that there was a need to set up Islamic school to educate children about Islam. In 1963, the school was established with support of an Islamic NGO outside the country and then the government Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Satisfaction and Preferences 87 absorbed it. Now it is only one public Islamic school in this area… The students learn Arabic in addition to secular subjects.” The emphasis on faith and values in faith-inspired schools does not mean however that the schools do not accept children from all faiths. Interviews with school leaders suggest that indeed all faith-inspired schools accept children who belong to a religion different from that of the school. Still, there were differences in terms of the religion of the children enrolled. At Christian schools, 87.5 per- cent of the parents interviewed were Christian, which is a bit higher than the share of Christians in the national population, but not extremely so. By contrast among parents interviewed at Islamic schools, 91.7 percent were Muslim. Thus, while many Muslims go to Christian schools, few Christians go to Islamic schools. Finally, as shown in table 7.7, most parents appear satisfied with the quality of teachers in their schools and academic performance, despite evidence from test scores that suggest low levels of achievements. However, in public schools, 83.4 percent of parents appear to be dissatisfied with the resources available to their schools, and the lack of satisfaction is similar in secular private schools. By contrast, 66.7 percent of parents in faith-inspired schools appear to be satisfied with the resources available in the schools. This result is surprising, but it may be due to the small sample size in the qualitative fieldwork. In the sample of schools for the qualitative fieldwork, faith-inspired schools that do not receive public funding have a high share of teachers who are not formally certified as per the guidelines of the Ghana Educational Service (GES). In public schools (both faith inspired and secular), teachers are recruited directly by GES and receive in-service teacher training. By contrast, private schools recruit teachers independently, which results in a large share of teachers without certification. This does not mean however that the performance of those teachers is substandard, given the ability of private schools to fire teachers that would not perform adequately. As the head teacher at a private Christian school explained it: “When recruiting teachers, we advertise. Then people apply and we have inter- views with them. Their qualification is assessed to know if they can teach chil- dren and which classes they can handle. I have worked in public schools for more than 25 years. In this school, I am the only qualified teacher and others are not qualified… Some did not complete secondary school… But we train them on how to make a lesson plan, how to give lessons, how to discipline the children, Table 7.7  Evaluation of Schools by Parents, Qualitative Fieldwork, Ghana 2010 percent School resources Quality of teachers Academic performance Positive Neutral Negative Positive Neutral Negative Positive Neutral Negative FISs 66.7 0 33.3 95.8 0 4.2 87.5 12.5 0 Public 16.7 0 83.4 95.7 4.4 0 70.8 12.5 16.7 Private secular 0 12.5 87.5 100.0 0 0 75.0 18.8 6.3 Source: Ghana fieldwork. See Shojo and Wodon 2013. Note: Positive corresponds to parents declaring being very satisfied or satisfied. Negative corresponds to parents declaring being dissatisfied or very dissatisfied. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 88 Satisfaction and Preferences everything. We educate them to become a good teacher.” While perceptions of teacher quality are as high in private faith-inspired schools as in other schools in the sample, it might still be beneficial to have private school teachers benefitting from in-service training that the GES provides for teachers serving in public schools. Reasons for Choosing FISs in Burkina Faso In the Burkina Faso fieldwork, parents also tend to be satisfied with the schools they send their children to, whether one considers teacher quality, academic results, school resources, school goals, student behavior, and specific topics. Christian schools tend to have a higher satisfaction than Islamic schools, followed by public schools. There are some differences, but not necessarily major ones— for example, parents relying on Christian and Islamic schools might be very satis- fied with the academics, while parents using public schools might be less satis- fied. As regards relationships with the community however, Islamic schools had a higher satisfaction rate than public and Christian schools—this relates to whether the school is concerned with community well-being, whether it sup- ports community projects and activities, and whether it provides assistance for the poorest community members. In all schools, parents suggested that improvements could be made in some areas. One in five parents in Christian schools mentioned overcrowding and 40 percent suggested the need to improve and expand facilities. Overcrowding was even more of an issue in the public schools with about half of the parents citing this problem. In Islamic schools, 38.7 percent of parents said that the level of the school fees was beyond their means. In addition, 32.3 percent said that the schools lacked resources, 19.1 percent said that facilities needed improvement, and 16.1 percent suggested that the teachers’ performance was inadequate. Some parents complained about uneven academic performance in Franco- Arab schools and thought that quality could be further improved, especially through better trained teachers. Examples of such complaints are as follows: “[The teachers] are not trained… To educate children requires a mastery of certain techniques, a pedagogical knowledge. It would be good for the school to ­ train the teachers to improve their performance”; “There is a problem with the teachers. There are many young teachers who lack experience and qualifications. They are amateurs, young people in search of work”; “Certain pupils are ­ characterized by their good performance but there are many who are not… There is [too much] religious education, which is not subject to evaluation.” Yet other parents offered positive comments about what they viewed as a more holistic and well-rounded education: “The students learn both Arabic and French. They also learn to master the Qur’an and pray correctly. They are cultivated and have a sharp and open mind compared to students in the public schools”; “The school manages to achieve its goals by transmitting a quality education and by giving the children an exemplary education based on the Islamic faith…. The teachers perform well because in spite of their meager wages, they are conscien- tious and stress the education of the children.” Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Satisfaction and Preferences 89 Table 7.8  Reasons for Choosing the School over Other Options, Burkina Faso percent Parents at Parents at Parents at Islamic Christian public schools schools schools Location 38.7 33.3 70.0 Religious classes/identity, learning to be Muslim/Christian 83.9 33.3 — Moral education (values, behavior) 35.5 36.7 — To learn Arabic 29.0 — — To learn French 25.8 — 3.3 School administrator quality (headmaster) 9.7 6.7 3.3 Teacher quality: Knowledgeable, conscientious, effective 12.9 46.7 10.0 Academic results, test results 25.8 76.7 46.7 Child’s future (better education, work opportunities) 9.7 6.7 16.7 Familiarity with this school — 6.7 13.3 No or low school fees — — 30.0 Lack of religious proselytizing — — 16.7 Source: Burkina Faso fieldwork. See Gemignani and Wodon 2013. Note: Multiple answers allowed. — = not available. What about the reasons for choosing faith-inspired schools? The education provided by faith-inspired schools is valued by the individuals and communities that they serve, for reasons related to both quality and the promotion of religious and moral values, but with some differences in the motivations of parents in Franco-Arab (Islamic), Christian, and public schools. As shown in table 7.8, par- ents at Christian schools said that they chose their school for its academic and teacher quality (76.7 percent and 46.7 percent, respectively). By contrast, respondents in Islamic schools more often said that their choice of school was largely based on the opportunity for their children to receive a religious educa- tion (83.9 percent), with smaller numbers listing academic or teacher quality (25.8 percent and 12.9 percent respectively). In public schools, location was a deciding factor for 70 percent of parents, followed by academic quality (46.7 percent) and the lack of school fees (30.0 percent). Education on moral values was listed as a reason for school choice by about a third of parents in Islamic and Christian schools, but by no parents in public schools. As shown in table 7.9, when asked about the most important area of study for their children, the top response for parents sending their children in Franco-Arab schools is religious education (32.3 percent), followed by moral education and literacy (22.6 percent each). In contrast, a larger share of parents at Christian schools stated literacy (53.3 percent) or knowledge (13.3 percent) as the priority, followed by moral education (13.3 percent) and religious education (3.3 per- cent). Less than a quarter of parents in Christian schools ranked religion in their top three goals, versus three-quarters in Franco-Arab schools. Parents at secular schools followed the Christian schools pattern (43.3 percent literacy, 16.7 per- cent knowledge, 26.7 percent moral values, 3.3 percent religion). Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 90 Satisfaction and Preferences Table 7.9  Comparison of Various Schools in Burkina Faso, Burkina Faso percent Parents at Islamic Parents at Parents at public schools Christian schools schools Most important area of study Knowledge—general 3.3 13.3 16.7 Religious education 32.3 3.3 3.3 Moral education 22.6 13.3 26.7 Literacy (reading, writing) 22.6 53.3 43.3 Arabic 6.5 — — French 3.3 13.3 3.3 Music, art — 3.3 3.3 Life skills (health, hygiene, sex education) — — 3.3 Vocational training 6.5 — — All 100 100 100 Educational goal of highest importance Betterment of society 25.8 3.3 13.3 Moral development 22.6 10.0 3.3 Academic achievement 32.3 86.7 83.3 Spiritual development 19.4 — — Total 100 100 100 Performance of your school as compared to other schools Higher standard 38.7 83.3 63.3 Same standard 41.9 16.7 23.3 Lower standard 3.2 — 3.3 Don’t know, missing 16.1 — 10.0 Total 100 100 100 Benefit of the school for the community General academic advantages, literacy, etc. 29.0 20.0 43.4 Moral education 41.9 23.3 6.7 Religious education/spiritual guidance 41.9 20.0 — Religious community and identity 32.3 — — Future work/academic opportunities for 6.5 16.7 33.3 youth None/don’t know — 36.7 26.7 Source: Burkina Faso fieldwork. See Gemignani and Wodon 2013. Note: Multiple answers allowed. — = not available. Parents were also asked to choose the educational goal of highest importance, among social, moral, academic and spiritual goals. One-fifth of parents in Islamic schools selected spiritual goals (19.4 percent) versus no parents at Christian schools. Furthermore, one quarter of parents at Islamic schools selected the bet- terment of society as the most important educational goal. This is closely related to a view of education as a means for improving community well-being and self- determination. Indeed, when asked about community benefits from the schools, parents in Islamic schools listed a range of advantages related to the role of reli- gious and moral education in the lives of children and their families. Christian Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Satisfaction and Preferences 91 school parents discussed both academic and moral/religious advantages to the community. In secular schools, the role of religious and moral education did not come up in a major way in the answers. As for the students, the vast majority of parents at Christian and secular schools selected academic achievement as the most important goal. Finally, while most parents in Christian schools feel that their school has very high performance standards as compared to the public system, parents at Islamic schools are fairly evenly split between those who state that academic standards are about the same as in the public schools, and those who state that the standards in the Franco-Arab schools are higher. It is important to note that many parents in all types of schools value moral education, even though it does not always show up at the top of a list of goals or as an important factor in choosing a school. A large percentage of parents at all schools listed moral values as one of their top three educational goals (48.4 per- cent at Islamic schools, 80 percent at Christian schools, and 70 percent at public schools), and more than half of parents in both Islamic and Christian schools cited moral education as a key advantage of faith-based schools. But Christian schools are attended by children of all faiths, and religious education is not emphasized in the curriculum. Rather, the schools stress moral values in addition to secular subjects. Several school leaders pointed out that the recent agreement between the Catholic leadership and the state (while providing subsidies for teacher salaries) has made it particularly important that the national curriculum be strictly followed, which leaves little time for religious education. The Protestant schools visited had a similar approach. In both types of school, 15 minutes to 2 hours per week may be devoted to religious instruction and this is limited to a short prayer at the beginning and end of the day, songs, and, in some schools, Biblical lessons on morality. In the Catholic schools, children who are not Christian pray or meditate during prayer time, following their own faith prac- tices. More formal instruction (Bible studies, catechism) takes place outside of school hours. Overall, what emerges from this analysis is fairly similar to the findings for Ghana. Faith matters for the choice of a school, at least for parents sending their children to faith-inspired schools, and this is especially the case for Islamic schools. Christian schools tend to have the highest academic standard, while the situation is more mixed for Islamic schools. The issue of quality in Islamic schools has been identified in previous work, and been related among others to the role of marabous, a specific type of Islamic teacher (Hagberg 2002; Yaro 1994), as well as the fact that many parents sending their children to Islamic schools view Qu’ranic education as more important than other topics (De Lange 2007) which may lead some Muslim children to attend nonformal Islamic schools (Kürzinger et al. 2008). This can lead to difficult choices for Muslim parents between send- ing their children to an Islamic school emphasizing religious studies and a Christian school with higher academic standards. To some extent, the rise mostly in urban areas of new Franco-Arab schools that integrate Islamic education and secular subjects is a response to this dilemma (Hagberg 2002). Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 92 Satisfaction and Preferences Performance of Education Services in Ghana Satisfaction rates are not a measure of performance, if performance is understood as related to human development outcomes. In the case of education, performance is often measured through test scores, but the available data on test scores, for example on Ghana, do not identify students in faith-inspired schools separately (George and Wodon 2013). An alternative is to rely on subjective perceptions of literacy (reading and writing) and numeracy which are available in the surveys used for this study. These assessments are typically made by the household head. They are substantially less precise than test scores, but nevertheless useful. The assessment provided in this section for Ghana is based on data from the GLSS5, with the objective to compare faith-inspired schools to public and private secular schools (as mentioned in previous chapters both Christians and Islamic schools are considered together—the two categories cannot be disaggregated in the data). Five questions are asked to each child in the survey aged five years and above: Can the child read in English? Can s/he read a Ghanaian language? Can s/he write in English? Can s/he write in a Ghanaian language? Can s/he do written calculation? The focus in this section is on reading and writing in English, and written calculation (this is because much fewer children read and write in a Ghanaian language than in English). Basic statistics on the answers to these ques- tions for the sample of children aged 10–15 who are attending a primary school at the time of the survey are provided in table 7.10 nationally, as well as by gender, by quintile of well-being, and by urban-rural residence area. In the national sample, 65.0 percent of the students in public schools can read in Table 7.10  Literacy and Numeracy in Primary School, Children Aged 10–15, Ghana percent Quintiles Areas Gender 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th Rural Urban Female Male Total Public Reading in English 59.0 59.3 66.0 78.7 81.5 59.3 80.1 64.1 65.8 65.0 Writing in English 52.4 54.7 60.5 72.1 77.8 53.6 74.4 58.1 60.6 59.4 Written calculation 86.8 89.4 88.7 95.1 95.4 87.7 94.9 88.8 90.5 89.7 Religious Reading in English 17.2 68.7 72.1 88.4 93.9 50.7 89.6 70.1 72.3 71.3 Writing in English 17.2 58.0 61.6 73.3 89.7 42.4 82.0 66.0 60.8 63.3 Written calculation 79.8 85.6 86.6 100.0 100.0 86.0 97.3 88.2 95.3 91.9 Private (non religious) Reading in English 80.1 79.7 89.6 92.3 96.8 82.6 94.1 90.7 88.2 89.4 Writing in English 75.8 68.6 84.7 89.0 88.8 72.2 90.7 83.1 83.1 83.1 Written calculation 91.4 94.1 95.6 97.9 98.5 94.6 97.3 96.8 95.7 96.2 All Reading in English 58.4 61.7 69.7 82.4 87.5 60.8 84.2 68.0 69.1 68.6 Writing in English 52.2 56.2 64.0 75.8 82.5 54.7 78.9 61.8 63.5 62.7 Written calculation 86.8 89.7 89.6 96.1 96.9 88.2 95.7 89.8 91.4 90.7 Source: Estimates based on GLSS5. See Adoho and Wodon 2013c. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Satisfaction and Preferences 93 English, and the proportion is 59.4 percent for writing in English. The corre- sponding shares are higher in faith-inspired schools, at respectively 71.3 percent and 63.3 percent, and even higher in other private schools, at 89.4 percent and 83.1 percent. Similarly, the proportion of students who can do a written calcula- tion is lower in public schools, at 89.7 percent, than in faith-inspired and other private schools, at 91.9 percent and 96.2 percent. There are differences between quintiles of well-being, as well as between rural and urban areas in subjective measures of literacy and numeracy. In many cases, students in the lower quintiles tend to have a likelihood of being able to read, write, or compute up to 30 percentage points below those in the top quintiles (and in one case—that of students in the bottom quintile attending faith-inspired schools, the difference is even larger, but that sample is small). Note that in urban areas, students in FISs do better than students in public schools, but in rural areas, the reverse is observed, especially for reading and writing. It is likely that the lower subjective measures of literacy in rural areas are related in part to the very low measures of literacy among students in FISs who belong to the bottom quin- tile of well-being, since most students in that quintile live in rural areas. Given the selection process that goes on both across and within families as to whom will go to which type of school, simple statistical differences in perceived literacy and numeracy between the three types of schools need not reflect differ- ences in school performance. For example, if within a neighborhood the best students are sent to private schools, which tend to be more expensive, this could explain part of the higher measures of literacy and numeracy observed in those schools. To correct for such bias, regression analysis is needed, taking into account the fact that the selection of school may depend on the performance of the stu- dent (instrumentation for the choice of school is required; this is done using the leave-out mean primary sampling unit (PSU) market shares by type of school, as explained in chapter 2, with bootstrapping used in the second stage regressions to correct standard errors). The independent variables for the various regressions (school choice and sub- jective indicators of literacy and numeracy) include (1) the type of school attended by the child; (2) the geographic location of the child according to urban or rural status and the main regions in the country; (3) the quintile of consump- tion per equivalent adult of the household in which the child lives; (4) the reli- gion of the child (with Catholic being the reference category); (5) the sex of the child, whether this is the elder child, and whether the father and mother live in the household; (6) some information on time use for the child that is less likely to be endogenous, and who pays for schooling in the household; (7) the grade in which the child is with the first grade of primary school being the reference category; and (8) information about the level of schooling of the household head and the spouse of the head when there is one. The full set of regressions is available in Adoho and Wodon (2013c). The school choice regressions suggest that the religion of the child is not a key deter- minant of school choice, with two exceptions: other Christian children (those who are neither Catholic nor Protestant) and children whose parents declare not Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 94 Satisfaction and Preferences having a religion are less likely to go to faith-inspired schools. Another key result is that children from wealthier households are less likely to enroll in faith- inspired schools, although the effect is not systematic. A higher education level for the household head and spouse makes it more likely that the child will go to a faith-inspired school, whereas a child in a female-headed household has a higher probability of going to a public school. Employment type for the house- hold head or spouse does not have much impact on school choice, but the leave- out participation rate in faith-inspired schools is highly statistically significant, and the impact is large as expected. The key results for the type of schools attended and how this affects literacy and numeracy are provided in table 7.11 (the full set of regressions is provided in appendix G). As compared to public schools, and controlling for other charac- teristics, attending a faith-inspired school does not have a statistically significant effect on the likelihood of being able to read in English, but it reduces the prob- ability of writing in English. These effects are for rural areas, and thus confirm the message from the basic statistics in table 7.9. For urban areas, in addition to those effects, one must take into account the interaction effects between the faith- inspired school and the urban dummy variables. Only the interaction effect for reading is positive and statistically significant, but the combined effect of the religious dummy and the urban interaction effect would not be statistically sig- nificant. Students in private secular schools, on the other hand, do perform better than those in public schools. A number of other results not shown in table 7.11 are worth noting. The performance of children is better in the Greater Accra region than in other regions, and in urban versus rural areas, but the quintile of well-being of the household to which a student belongs often do not have a statistically significant impact controlling for other variables, except for the top quintile, nor does the faith affiliation of the child in most cases. Boys tend to do better than girls, while other child characteristics and whether the father or mother is living in the household do not matter much. Children who spend more time on housekeep- ing actually do better in terms of all three subjective indicators of learning. If a child is in a higher grade, the likelihood of being able to read, write, or compute is much higher, as one would expect. A higher education for the household head Table 7.11  Selected Correlates of Subjective Literacy and Numeracy, Ghana Reading in English Writing in English Written calculation Schools/areas (reference: public/rural) Religious –0.294 –0.082* 0.007 Private 0.205* 0.186** 0.037 Religious and urban 0.124* 0.109 0.034 Private and urban 0.105*** –0.108* –0.003 Urban 0.099*** 0.133*** 0.023* Source: Adoho and Wodon 2013c. Note: Statistical significance levels: *=10 percent, **=5 percent, ***=1 percent. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Satisfaction and Preferences 95 is sometimes associated with higher performance for the child, but this is far from systematic for the household head, while it matters more for the spouse of the head. Who pays for the education of the child within the household (the head or the spouse) does not seem to make a difference. Conclusion This chapter was devoted to an assessment of the satisfaction of users with the quality of services provided by various types of schools, and to the reasons for selecting a specific school. Both national surveys and results from the qualitative fieldwork implemented in Ghana and Burkina Faso were used. Two main find- ings emerge from the analysis of both types of data. First, cross-country data suggest that FISs have better satisfaction rates among their clientele than public facilities, but lower satisfaction rates than private secu- lar facilities. The fact that despite limited resources FISs seem to better serve their users than public facilities is encouraging for the work that these institu- tions do. The appreciation for this work by users also appeared clearly in the qualitative fieldwork for Ghana and Burkina Faso. As to the higher satisfaction rate still for private secular facilities, it is not too surprising, given that these facili- ties tend to be more expensive and thereby can afford to provide better services. Also, the emphasis on religious education placed in FISs, and especially in Islamic schools, as well as the focus on values in Christian schools, are appreciated by parents, and this is a key reason for some parents to choose to send their children to those schools. Second, high satisfaction rates need not translate into higher measures of per- formance in terms of education outcomes. In the case analyzed here on subjec- tive perceptions of literacy and numeracy in Ghana, there are essentially no sta- tistically significant differences in outcomes between faith-inspired and public schools (both Christians and Islamic—the two categories could not be disaggre- gated), while there is evidence that private secular schools do better. Qualitative evidence suggests that Christian schools that focus more on academics may have better performing students, but this may not apply to Islamic schools, although there is heterogeneity between Franco-Arab urban schools that may do well and small rural Islamic schools reaching the poor, but where opportunities are more limited. Possibly some of these schools that have a strong focus on religious edu- cation may invest less in other subjects, so that without state funding, the overall quality of the education received by children in these schools may be lower. Better-trained teachers could be one of the ways to improve the education according to the parent’s perceptions. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 CHAPTER 8 Conclusion Despite the important role of faith-inspired schools in education service delivery in Africa, remarkably little systematic evidence is available today on their market share, reach to the poor, cost, and satisfaction among users, in comparison with public and private secular facilities. The primary purpose of this study was to build a stronger evidence base on those questions for Sub-Saharan Africa, with more detailed work for Ghana and Burkina Faso. The first significant finding was that data from household surveys suggest an average market share for faith-inspired schools (FISs) of about 10–15 percent, which is smaller than is often claimed. The second finding was that FISs do typi- cally not reach the poor in absolute terms more than other household groups. This is not surprising, given the barrier for affordability that the school and other fees charged by FISs represent. But in addition, on average FISs also do not reach the poor more than public facilities, even if they do so more than private secular facilities, and may make special efforts to reaching the poor as well as other vul- nerable groups within the constraints they face. The third finding was that the cost for households of the services provided by FISs is higher than that of public facilities, possibly because of a lack of access to public funding which then neces- sitates higher levels of cost recovery, but lower than that of private secular schools. The fourth finding was that FISs have higher satisfaction rates than public facilities, but slightly lower satisfaction rates than private secular facilities. The fifth finding was that parents using FISs place a strong emphasis on religious education and values. This is the case for both Christian and Islamic schools, but especially in Islamic schools in terms of the role played by religious education. The sixth finding was that students in faith-inspired and private schools may perform better than those in public schools, but this may be due in part to self- selection, and more research is needed in this area, especially for FISs, given the potential heterogeneity between FISs in the quality of the services provided. While the analysis has been conducted for the most part using data from national surveys from 16 countries, other surveys could be used in the future to expand the country coverage of this work. Some of the Multiple Indicators Cluster Surveys (MICSs) recently implemented in Africa have the required Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   97 98 Conclusion information—as an example, the MICS 2010 in Togo identifies the education service provider (public, private secular, private faith-inspired and community school) and it also provides information on education expenditures. More gener- ally, as more data become available, more counties could be added to the analysis. In terms of the scope of the analysis, the data could also be used for assessing other education outcomes, including whether different types of providers are more efficient than others. This could in principle be measured by looking at indicators such as age for grade, repetition, dropouts, and completion rates. In countries where administrative data are available, comparisons of the allocations of resources (for example teachers) could also be made between different types of providers. More work is also needed on differences in performance (for exam- ple using test score data) between providers. Finally, the analysis of the private cost of schooling combined with administrative data on public funding for vari- ous types of providers could be used to better understand the cost of achieving desirable education outcomes and to generate national education accounts, as has been done in health. What about policy? This study was devoted to a basic diagnostic of the role of FISs in service provision in education in Sub-Saharan Africa, with additional work for Ghana and Burkina Faso. Policy questions related to the integration of FISs in national education systems have not been discussed much, but work could be done in this area as well given that such integration is likely to present trade-offs for FISs, as well as for donors and line Ministries. This is thus one prior- ity area where further research should be undertaken. At least three points or research items on the agenda are worth emphasising here. A first important item on the agenda is to conduct more research on how to deal with the risk of duplication of efforts and the lack of harmonization between the programs and interventions of various types of service providers. To minimize these risks, it is important to improve data collection in order to provide detailed pictures of the service delivery landscape at both the local and national levels. But it is also important to promote collaborations—for example though memo- randums of understanding between FISs and governments. Mappings of existing interventions and collaborative agreements should ideally also factor in nonfacilities-based services where the role of faith communities may well be ­ important. This is important for government ministries as well as education pro- viders, but also for donors. Within the World Bank for example, this report has relevance for the work-on-service delivery indicators and public-private partner- ships carried out by the human development network and the regions. A second important item on the agenda is to better understand the constraints in which FISs operate, the challenges they face, and the opportunities they offer. Some challenges faced by FISs may also be faced by other types of providers, but others may be specific to FISs. How can FISs maintain in their programs a pref- erential option for the poor when the sources of revenues available to them are limited and in some cases reduced? How can FISs maintain their distinctive vision and culture while being progressively more integrated into national educa- tion systems? How can the capacity of FISs to evaluate their own interventions, Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Conclusion 99 as well as to assess the extent to which they reach the poor, be expanded? FISs do appear to have some comparative advantages, and a better understanding of how exactly they are able to provide services of quality (as measured through satisfaction rates) would be welcome, as would be an analysis of whether specific practices and characteristics of FISs are transferrable to the public sector as well as private secular facilities. Also, how can a voice be given to FISs in policy discus- sions at the local, national, and international levels for them to share their experience? Finally, a third sets of questions, not discussed in this study, relates to the impact of faith on behaviors, not only as it relates to the choice of service ­ provider, but also more generally. In many areas such as child marriage, which has implications for education outcomes, faith-related practices and cultural ­traditions play an important role, underscoring the potential of engaging religious and tra- ditional leaders as well as FISs in efforts to eradicate such practices, or at least their worst aspects. Given that the market share of FISs is smaller than many had thought, and that their reach to the poor is also limited even if their contribution should not be understated, it could very well be that the more important role that faith plays in education is related to the impact of faith on a wide range of behaviors, as opposed to service delivery. Questions related to faith and behaviors that affect education and other human development outcomes are often more difficult to understand, and also more difficult to influence through government policies than issues related directly to service delivery, but certainly not less important to consider. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Appendix A Faith and Formal Models of School Choice: An Illustration A fundamental tenet of economic analysis, as well as rational choice theory in religious studies, is that service providers, as well as individuals and households, make rational decisions with regards to the practice of their faith. This includes decisions related to the supply and demand for services, which take into account a variety of factors. One such factor is a person’s faith—whether on the demand or supply side of service delivery. But other factors such as cost, quality, and loca- tion also matter. There is a large literature in economics on modeling decisions by both firms and consumers which is relevant for a discussion of service delivery by different types of providers. It is not possible here to review this literature, but it is useful to give just one simple example of what this literature entails—even if this is a bit technical—in order to illustrate the considerations at work in theo- retical and empirical work on those issues. The example provided here relates to the role of religiosity in private school choice, and the model was provided by Cohen-Zada and Sander (2008). This section simply restates the model, albeit with slightly different symbols and wording to fit the context of this study (Cohen-Zada and Sander consider Catholics and Protestants in the United States; here the discussion is outlined in terms of Muslims and Christians as the focus is on Africa). Each household has one child, and the question is whether the child should be sent to a public, faith- inspired (Christian or Islamic), or private secular school. The utility or welfare of household i, which has a level of religiosity zi, depends on its consumption of a numeraire good c (this good represents all other goods consumed apart from the education of the child), as well as the academic quality in secular subjects of the school attended by the child, x, and the religious orientation of the school. Cohen-Zada and Sander stipulate the following utility function:  .J J J  a ln ( ci ) + (1 − α ) ln ( xi ) + RS + βS zi + ∈ S in faith – inspired school U ( ci , xi , zi ) =    J a ln ( ci ) + (1 − α ) ln ( xi ) + ∈ S in secular school Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   101 102 Faith and Formal Models of School Choice: An Illustration J where RS represents the utility or disutility that a household of faith affiliation J (Christian or Muslim) with no or a low level of religiosity (zi = 0) derives from the religious environment in a faith-inspired school of type S. Even for house- holds with no or low levels of religiosity, the utility of the household is assumed to be higher if the child attends a school of its own faith affiliation, as opposed to a school from a different (or no) faith affiliation. J { } In the above equation, the matrix β S captures the effect of religiosity on the utility of the household in each type of faith-inspired school. It is assumed first that the household derives a higher utility if it is more religious and the child attends a school of the same affiliation as that of the household. It is also assumed that for any level of religiosity, more utility is derived from sending one’s child to a school of one’s own faith affiliation. No assumptions are made as to whether a positive or negative utility is derived from sending one’s child to a school from a different faith affiliation. The authors further assume that public education is provided free of charge at a uniform level of quality x –. Private schools, whether faith-inspired or not, charge parents for the education provided to their children. The next assumption is that the price of a specific faith-inspired school for households will be lower in areas where a higher share of the population is of the school’s faith affiliation. This could be because other sources of revenues are available to faith-inspired schools in such areas apart from the direct cost-recov- ery for the schooling services provided (donations may be available), or simply because some of the costs associated with the faith-inspired school can be shared with the local Church or mosque. Still another explanation for differences in prices might be that in areas with a high population density of a specific faith, more schools of that faith affiliation will be available to serve the population, which may reduce transportation costs for parents. Denoting the share of the population that is Catholic by r, so that the share of the population that is Muslim is 1–r, the price of Christian schools is assumed to be of the following functional form: −r −r he form p M = (1 − r ) 2 . pc = r 1 ,while the price of Islamic schools is of th Bycontrast, the price of secular private schools isconstant, so that ps = p. On the basis of those assumptions, and denoting household income by yi, the authors show that in a simple stochastic framework, the ratio of the probabilities to choose a faith-inspired school (Catholic, pC, or Islamic, pM) versus a public school (pG) will be such that:  π J π  log  c  G J J  = f (α ) + (1 − α ) ln ( yi ) + RC + βC . . . zi + γ1 (1 − α ) ln ( r ) − (1 − α ) ln x β . α. . π J J J log  π M   = f (α ) + (1 − α ) ln ( yi ) + R M + M zi + γ 2 (1 − ) ln (1 − r ) − (1 − α ) ln x  G  Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Faith and Formal Models of School Choice: An Illustration 103 These are but some of the relationships derived by the authors from their model. A similar equation can be obtained for the probability of sending one’s child to a private secular school versus a public or government school, and comparisons between those schools and faith-inspired schools, as well as between different types of faith-inspired schools can also be made. These relationships formalize in a simple way a few basic assumptions that can then be tested, such as the hypothesis that all other things being equal, households with higher incomes will be more likely to send their children to faith-inspired schools (since public schools are free, and only higher-income households can afford to pay for tuition at a low cost to them in terms of foregone utility), or the hypothesis that the share of the population of a specific faith affiliation in a given area will tend to lead to a higher probability of households of that affiliation sending their children to faith-inspired schools in that area (since this lowers the cost of the schools), and that religiosity affects positively the likelihood to send one’s children to faith-inspired schools of one’s own faith affiliation (since this enters directly in the utility function of the household). Also, a higher level of quality for public schools will reduce the probability of attending both secular and faith-inspired schools (whether Christian or Muslim) as compared to public schools. The main point made by Cohen-Zada and Sander in their paper is that failing to control for religiosity induces a bias in the estimation of the determinants of school choice, as well as in the relationship between the type of school attended and some measures of performance. Their various models are estimated using data from the General Social Survey implemented in the United States. The results suggest, as expected, that both faith affiliation and the level of religiosity of households affect the demand for faith-inspired and secular private schools, and that the positive influence of Catholic schooling on student performance (as proxied for example through graduation) may be overestimated when religiosity is not taken into account. More detailed results for the United States were obtained by Cohen-Zada and Sander in their estimation. For example, they find that for Catholics and funda- mentalist Protestants, higher religiosity increases the demand for, respectively, Catholic and fundamentalist Protestant schools, but not for other types of faith- inspired schools. By contrast, for nonfundamentalist Protestants, higher religiosity is associated with a higher demand for nonsectarian private schools, but not for other private (faith-inspired) schools. As to households with no religious affilia- tion, they are more likely to opt for nonsectarian schools. The authors stress that to some extent, the limited substitutability of the various schools because of differences in faith affiliation may reduce the competitive pressure on schools, with some implications for policies related to vouchers for example. The authors also note that to the extent that households chose their location in function of the availability of different types of school, religiosity may lead to neighborhoods that are more concentrated from a religious point of view, but less so from a pure income point of view, as standard economic models suggest based on competi- tion between states or localities to attract wealthier households. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 104 Faith and Formal Models of School Choice: An Illustration The type of work done in the present study is in many cases more basic and less technical than what is being done in studies such as that of Cohen-Zada and Sander using richer data sets available for the United States. Yet the present study does also suggest that faith affiliation and implicitly religiosity do matter for school choice, as discussed for example in chapter 7 devoted to the satisfaction with service providers and the reason for choosing faith-inspired providers in Sub-Saharan Africa, and especially in Ghana and Burkina Faso. Unfortunately for the quantitative analysis provided in this study, the multipurpose household surveys used to identify the various types of service providers in education do not include variables that could be used as proxies to measure a household’s level of religiosity. This information is also not available in Demographic and Health Surveys. Still the model and analysis of Cohen-Zada and Sander were briefly summarized here because their study shows well and in a simple way how it is feasible to derive testable hypotheses about religious practice—in this case as it relates to the choice of school provider for one’s children, within a rational choice theory framework that takes into account not only faith affiliation and religiosity, but also other parameters affecting school choices such as the cost of various schools and their quality. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Appendix B Rationale for Combining Quantitative and Qualitative Data1 This study relies on both nationally representative household surveys and quali- tative fieldwork data. The combination of quantitative and qualitative data is important and warranted by the nature of some of the questions being analyzed. Quantitative data and methods have long been privileged in the development literature, and especially in economics. They provide robustness to the results if they rely on appropriate samples, and regression analysis helps to control for a large number of other variables when measuring the impact of a specific variable on a given outcome. Yet quantitative data often cannot fully capture causality, especially when the analysis fails to provide appropriate contextual information. Qualitative methods such as participant observation or community surveys with key informant interviews help to shed light on the religious, economic, sociocul- tural, and political context of the processes under study. While quantitative analysis in development work is often goods- and services centered, qualitative research is often people centered (for example following Sen’s work on the importance of freedom and capabilities to achieve function- ings) and institutions centered (since the access to and use of services is driven by processes rather than a condition at a given point of time, the role of institu- tions in permitting or preventing access must be analyzed). Qualitative research also often contains both objective and subjective dimensions, to the degree that it considers both the objective conditions of people’s lives and access to services, and their perceptions about those services, and more generally their feelings about their situation (this can also be done with quantitative data). An important aspect of qualitative research methods refers to what scholars call research access. While no hasty conclusions should be made about the advantages of qualitative research techniques (respondents may refuse to be interviewed while they may accept to fill in an anonymous questionnaire), such methods are often better suited to address sensitive issues, some of which may be related to faith. In some cases developing a relationship of trust with the “researched” is needed for data collection. The need to adapt the language Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   105 106 Rationale for Combining Quantitative and Qualitative Data according to the type of actors under study is also important for the discovery of knowledge (Buchanan, Boddy, and McCalman 1988). In addition, accessing cer- tain types of interviewees such as officials may be hard by simply sending out a questionnaire. Another argument in favor of integrated research methods relates to the potential of complementing quantitative data with actor-oriented perspectives in applied research. An actor-oriented perspective entails the variety of social prac- tices and often incompatible worldviews between various actors and the multiple realities to which these practices and worldviews respond (Long and Long 1992). In the case of research on service delivery, key actors would include not only the various clients of the organizations providing the services but also the profession- als providing those services, whether they work in private or public institutions. The experience and voice of clients, as well as the perspective of government professionals and private facilities’ staffs at the different echelons of the service delivery process, are often overlooked when relying only on quantitative survey data, or at least not systematically and rigorously researched. Still another argument in favor of integrated research methods relates to pol- icy making. Qualitative data derived from interviews and focus groups are often criticized for its subjectivity. This is a legitimate concern, and it underscores the fact that qualitative research methods must be implemented rigorously by well- trained researchers, with their results ideally supported by further quantitative analysis. But policy-oriented social analysis is concerned with change and agen- cy—that is, how the beneficiaries of education services, the staffs in the field manning the facilities, and the policy makers can act outside and sometimes against a system which may reduce access to the services for the poor. In such contexts, the subjectivity of the various actors, and how as persons they perceive their situations of deprivation and/or lack of access to existing services, is crucial to understanding the basis of agency. A potential problem with formal, objective, and often quantitative methods is that they may take for granted the context and relationships that constitutes the phenomena under study. At the other extreme, a subjective point of view may assert that social reality is an ongoing process that social actors continually recon- struct, failing to see the existing regularities. A key challenge for policy analysis is to analyze the objective conditions of reality while identifying how perceptions influence reality. Especially when it takes into consideration the rules, values, and perceptions of the individuals or groups involved, qualitative research may help to ensure that policies and programs are responsive to the needs of intended beneficiaries in all their social and cultural diversity—including with respect to their faith. And while qualitative methods can help to enrich areas which have traditionally been dominated by quantitative research, the reverse is also true: quantitative methods can enrich these areas which have been dominated by qualitative research. Indeed, the absence or difficulty of quantification has been a factor in the still relatively slow systematic take up of research aiming to mea- sure the contribution of faith-inspired providers of education services in Sub- Saharan Africa. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Rationale for Combining Quantitative and Qualitative Data 107 Note 1. This section follows closely Clert, Gacitua-Mario, and Wodon (2001). On the argu- ments for combining quantitative and qualitative research methods, see for example Bourdieu and Wacquant (1992), Neuman (1999), and Bamberger (2000). Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Appendix C Identification of Faith-Inspired Schools in Multipurpose National Household Surveys The analysis in this study is based in part on nationally representative multipur- pose household surveys with education modules in which the questions on the types of provider used by households for education enables the identification of faith-inspired providers separately from other (secular) private providers. In this appendix, more details are provided on these surveys, and especially on how the questions are asked about the service providers in the questionnaires. Table C.1 provides the list of the surveys used, together with their exact name and sample size. Table C.2 provides the information on the way in which ques- tions are asked on the types of education providers in the various surveys. All of the modalities that can be chosen by the respondent are assigned to one of three categories: public facilities, faith-inspired facilities, and private secular facilities. Often different surveys ask these questions in different ways, which may be necessary in order to take into account the peculiarities of each country’s educa- tion system. Note that in most countries only one question is asked about the type of facility used, with the question combining the type of facility used and the type of provider (say public versus private religious). In other countries, two questions are asked, that is households are asked first about the type of facility they use and next whether the facility is public, private-religious, or private non- religious, or some version of this. Two comments are important to make. First, in many cases, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) have been included together with faith-inspired provid- ers. This is because in several countries, NGOs are lumped together with faith- inspired schools (FISs) in the way questions are asked in the surveys. To keep the data consistent, where NGOs are identified separately, they have then also been considered as FISs. However, typically the market share of NGOs is much smaller than that of FISs in surveys where the two types of organizations can be assessed separately, so this does not lead to any major bias in the results. In addi- tion, at least some NGOs tend to be faith inspired. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   109 110 Identification of Faith-Inspired Schools in Multipurpose National Household Surveys Table C.1  Multipurpose Household Surveys Used for Cross-Country Comparisons Country Year Survey name Number of households Burkina Faso 2007 Enquête Annuelle sur les conditions de vie des ménages (EACVM-QUIBB) 8,496 Burundi 2006 Enquête Questionnaire des Indicateurs de Base du Bien être (QUIBB) 7,046 Cameroon 2007 Enquête sur les Conditions des Ménages Camerounais II (ECAM) 11,391 Chad 2003/04 Deuxième Enquête sur la Consommation et le Secteur Informel au Tchad (ECOSIT) 6,697 Congo, Dem. Rep. 2004/05 Enquête 1-2-3 (123 survey) 12,098 Ghana 2003 Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire Survey (CWIQ) 49,003 Ghana 2005/06 Ghana Living Standards Survey, Fifth round (GLSS) 8,687 Kenya 2005 Kenya Integrated Household Budget Survey (KIHBS) 13,158 Malawi 2004 Malawi Integrated Household Survey (HIS) 11,280 Mali 2006 Enquête Légère. Intégrée auprès des Ménages (ELIM) 4,494 Niger 2007 Enquête nationale sur le budget et la consommation des ménages (ENBC) 4,000 Nigeria 2003/04 Nigeria Living Standards Survey (LMS) 19,158 Congo Rep. 2005 Enquête Congolaise auprès des Ménages pour l’évaluation de la pauvreté (ECOM) 5,002 Senegal 2005 Enquête de Suivi de la Pauvreté au Sénégal (ESPS) 13,568 Sierra Leone 2003 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey (SLIHS) 3,720 Swaziland 2009 Swaziland Household Income and Expenditure Survey (SHIES) 3,167 Uganda 2010 Uganda National Household Survey (UNHS) 6,775 Zambia 2004 Zambia Living Conditions Monitoring Survey (LCMS) 19,315 Source: World Bank data. See Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. Second, because of the way questions are asked in the surveys, the identifica- tion of FISs in some countries may be better than in others, and it is difficult to make a precise country-level assessment of the quality of the identification. At the same time, the cross-check with the UIS data on private sector provision sug- gests that the data obtained from the surveys reflect relatively well the adminis- trative data. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Identification of Faith-Inspired Schools in Multipurpose National Household Surveys 111 Table C.2 Identification of the Various Types of Education Facilities Public Faith-inspired Private secular Burkina Faso Public Private Catholic school, Private nonreligious Private Protestant school, Franco-Arab school Burundi Government, community Church Private, other Cameroon Public, community school Mission (day), mission Lay private (day), lay private (evening) (evening), courses by cor- respondence or Internet Congo, Dem. Rep. Public without convention Public with convention Private Ghana, 2003 Government, community Religious Organization/ Other private, other Church (specify) Ghana, 2005/06 Public Private religious Private nonreligious Kenya Government, community Private church, private Private other, other Muslim Malawi—primary Lea/government Church/mission school, Private nonreligious, other Islamic school primary Malawi—secondary Government (conventional), Church/mission school, Night school, other Community day (cdss) Islamic school ­secondary Mali Government, community Religious organization Private, Other Niger Government, community Religious organization Private, Other Nigeria Federal government, Religious body Industrial, Private, Other State government, local government Congo, Rep. Government, community Church Private, Other Senegal French public, community Franco-Arab school, private Private secular, Other Catholic school Sierra Leone Government, local Mission/religious body, Private, Other (specify) ­government Nongovt. organization Swaziland Government Mission Private Uganda Government NGO/religious organization Private, Other Zambia Central government, local Mission/religious Industrial, Private, Other government (specify) Source: World Bank data. See Tsimpo and Wodon 2013b. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Appendix D Sample Size for the Qualitative Fieldwork Part of this study is based on data collected through qualitative fieldwork con- ducted by the World Bank in Ghana and Burkina Faso between April and June 2010. This appendix provides more details on the procedures that were followed to collect the data, and the sample size in terms of number of facilities, house- holds interviewed, and focus groups. The fieldwork was designed to answer two questions: (1) how does faith influence the choices of education providers, with a focus on primary schooling and (2) how do different religious communities view the role of religion in their daily lives; for example how does faith shape social norms and decision making regarding marriage and gender relations, health, family planning, inheritance, and labor force participation. The material discussed in this study relates to the first of these two questions. In the case of education, the data were collected through interviews with parents, head teachers, and school principals for a total of eight or nine schools per country in one urban and one rural location in each of the two countries. The schools were selected with inputs from district education officials, but the main criteria was the requirement that there should be both public and faith-inspired schools in the areas where the qualitative work was conducted—this enabled individuals to discuss the advantages and disadvantages of different types of schools, and to explain the reasons why they chose specific schools. Importantly, the selected areas had to have both Christian and Islamic schools apart from public schools. The selection of the areas was done in such a way as to have at least two areas—one urban and one rural area—for each of the two countries. In Ghana, faith-inspired schools—whether Christian or Islamic—were categorized in two groups: public and private faith-inspired schools. Public faith-inspired schools are government owned and funded. By contrast, private faith-inspired schools were established by FISs and remain to-date for the most part without government support as well as autonomous even if the curriculum at both the primary and secondary levels follows standards set by the Ghana Education Service. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   113 114 Sample Size for the Qualitative Fieldwork A semi-structured questionnaire was used to interview households sending their children to the various schools. Each interview took from one hour to one hour and a half, and focused in large part on the perceptions of the schools facili- ties, as well as the reasons that led individuals to choose one school versus another. Both responses to open-ended questions and to closed questions were obtained. While statistics are derived from the answers to closed questions, they should be considered as indicative only and should not be considered as neces- sarily representative of the opinions of all of the parents sending their children to various types of schools. This is because respondents were not selected in a purely random way among those using the services from a given facility, and because in addition the sample is small. A separate semi-structured questionnaire was also administered to the school principals and administrators as well as to a few teachers. Finally, a few interviews were conducted with key informants such as officials from government ministries. Summary information on the sample size for data collection is provided in table D.1. Table D.1  Sample Size for Qualitative Data Collection in Ghana and Burkina Faso Ghana Burkina Faso Sites/communities Number of sites 2 3 Number of facilities 8 (2 Public, 1 Public-Christian, 2 9 (3 Public, 3 Christian, and Private-Christian, 2 Public-Islamic, 3 Islamic schools) and 1 Islamic schools) Interviews Households/users 64 (8 per school) 90 (10 per school) Other interviews Selected interviews of owners/admin- Selected interviews of owners/ istrators of the education facilities, administrators of the educa- doctors and teachers, other staffs, tion facilities, doctors and religious leaders, and government teachers, other staffs, religious officials leaders, and government officials Focus groups Sites/communities 2 2 Participants/groups 8–12 8–12 Split by gender/roles 3 (Men, women, and religious leaders) 3 (Men, women, and religious leaders) Split by religion 3 (Muslims, Christians, and traditional 4 (Muslims, Catholics, Protes- religious groups) tants, and traditional religious groups) Number of groups 18 = 2 × 3 × 3 24 = 2 × 3 × 4 Source: World Bank data. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Appendix E Standard Errors for Statistical Tables Many statistical tables with mean values are provided in this study, and they are often large. In order to simplify these tables, standard errors have not been pro- vided, which restricts the ability of the reader to test for statistical significance, or differences between mean values. However, because most of the variables take only values of one or zero, a simple formula can be used to compute the standard errors of the means, if one is willing to assume equal weights for all observations as well as a simple random sample. Denoting the sample size by N, and indi- vidual values by xi, the estimated mean is ∧ x = 1 Σ N = 1 x and the estimated variance is V ( x ) = 1 Σ N ( x − x )2 . N i i N ( N − 1) i =1 i s of zero or one, the variance simplifies into If xi takes only values ∧2 1 2 σ ( x) = (x − x ) N −1 with x = M / N where M is number of observations with a value of one. The standard error is simply the squared root value of the variance, so that a typical 95 percent interval of confidence can be computed as:  1 1 2  2 Confidence interval = x − 2 (x − x ) , x + 2 (x − x ) .   N −1 N −1   The mean value x is what is typically presented in the tables, say in terms of the market share of faith-inspired schools (FISs), their reach to the poor, or the satisfaction of users with the services provided by FISs. The formula is a bit more complex if observations have different sampling weights, or if the sample is not a simple random sample but includes for example strata. In those cases the sample size and mean value is not sufficient to compute the exact standard error, but in most cases the confidence interval above would still be a good approxima- tion. Table E.1 provides values of the standard errors for different sample sizes and mean values. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   115 116 Standard Errors for Statistical Tables Table E.1  Standard Errors for Means of Dichotomized Variables Under Equal Weights and Simple Random Sampling Sample size Mean value 20 40 60 100 500 1,000 5,000 10,000 0.05 0.0500 0.0349 0.0284 0.0219 0.0098 0.0069 0.0031 0.0022 0.1 0.0688 0.0480 0.0391 0.0302 0.0134 0.0095 0.0042 0.0030 0.15 0.0819 0.0572 0.0465 0.0359 0.0160 0.0113 0.0051 0.0036 0.2 0.0918 0.0641 0.0521 0.0402 0.0179 0.0127 0.0057 0.0040 0.25 0.0993 0.0693 0.0564 0.0435 0.0194 0.0137 0.0061 0.0043 0.3 0.1051 0.0734 0.0597 0.0461 0.0205 0.0145 0.0065 0.0046 0.35 0.1094 0.0764 0.0621 0.0479 0.0214 0.0151 0.0067 0.0048 0.4 0.1124 0.0784 0.0638 0.0492 0.0219 0.0155 0.0069 0.0049 0.45 0.1141 0.0797 0.0648 0.0500 0.0223 0.0157 0.0070 0.0050 0.5 0.1147 0.0801 0.0651 0.0503 0.0224 0.0158 0.0071 0.0050 0.55 0.1141 0.0797 0.0648 0.0500 0.0223 0.0157 0.0070 0.0050 0.6 0.1124 0.0784 0.0638 0.0492 0.0219 0.0155 0.0069 0.0049 0.65 0.1094 0.0764 0.0621 0.0479 0.0214 0.0151 0.0067 0.0048 0.7 0.1051 0.0734 0.0597 0.0461 0.0205 0.0145 0.0065 0.0046 0.75 0.0993 0.0693 0.0564 0.0435 0.0194 0.0137 0.0061 0.0043 0.8 0.0918 0.0641 0.0521 0.0402 0.0179 0.0127 0.0057 0.0040 0.85 0.0819 0.0572 0.0465 0.0359 0.0160 0.0113 0.0051 0.0036 0.9 0.0688 0.0480 0.0391 0.0302 0.0134 0.0095 0.0042 0.0030 0.95 0.0500 0.0349 0.0284 0.0219 0.0098 0.0069 0.0031 0.0022 Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Appendix F Role of Faith-Inspired Institutions in Tertiary Education The analysis of the role of faith-inspired institutions or FIIs (we use here the term FIIs, given that tertiary education providers are not typically considered as “schools”) in education service delivery in this study is focused on primary and secondary schools for two main reasons. First, this is where the bulk of students are enrolled. Second, it is likely that faith plays a larger role in the choice made by households about where to send their children at the primary and secondary levels given that these are formative years. At the tertiary level, the academic or professional credentials and the cost structure of universities are likely to be the driving forces behind the choice of institution to attend. Still, FIIs do play a role in tertiary education in many countries (as well as in technical and vocational education and training or TVET, but good data on TVET are harder to come by in national multipurpose surveys). Therefore, it is interesting to replicate the work done for primary and secondary schooling at the tertiary level. This appen- dix provides results from essentially the same set of multipurpose household surveys on the market share, reach to the poor, cost, and satisfaction of students with the tertiary education that they receive, again comparing public, faith- inspired, and private secular institutions. It is important to note that the number of observations in the household surveys on which the statistics provided in this appendix are based is often small, given that only a small proportion of students reach tertiary education in most Sub-Saharan Africa. But because the results essentially confirm à priori expectations, it is worthwhile to present the data. Table F.1 suggests that the market share of FIIs is relatively small in the coun- tries listed. In a few countries, the market share appears to be zero, and the ­ highest market share is observed for Kenya, at 8.4 percent. Thus, even if some countries where the market share of FIIs might be higher are not included here, the market share of FIIs at the tertiary level tends to be low on average. In addi- tion, in most countries (Ghana, Swaziland, and Zambia are exceptions), the market share for FIIs is higher in urban than in rural areas. Also, the market share of private secular providers tends to be larger than that of FIIs, and often Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   117 118 Role of Faith-Inspired Institutions in Tertiary Education Table F.1  Market Share of Various Types of Providers, Tertiary Level percent National Urban Rural National Urban Rural Burkina, 2007 Kenya, 2005 Public 81.2 80.9 100.0 Public 52.8 49.2 56.6 Faith-inspired 1.0 1.0 — Faith-inspired 8.8 9.2 8.4 Private secular 17.8 18.0 — Private secular 38.4 41.6 35.0 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Burundi, 2006 Zambia, 2004 Public 49.4 40.2 68.9 Public 67.0 64.1 80.6 Faith-inspired 0.4 0.6 — Faith-inspired 2.6 2.4 3.4 Private secular 50.2 59.2 31.1 Private secular 30.4 33.5 16.0 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Cameroon, 2007 Congo, Rep., 2005 Public 88.1 87.4 94.4 Public 67.3 67.3 — Faith-inspired 1.8 1.8 1.8 Faith-inspired 1.3 1.3 — Private secular 10.1 10.9 3.8 Private secular 31.4 31.4 — Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Total 100.0 100.0 — Ghana, 2003 Nigeria 2003/04 Public 93.4 93.2 94.2 Public 92.1 91.3 95.3 Faith-inspired 1.7 1.3 3.8 Faith-inspired 0.2 0.3 0.0 Private secular 4.9 5.5 2.1 Private secular 7.7 8.4 4.7 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Ghana, 2005/06 Niger, 2007 Public 88.0 86.9 91.8 Public 49.8 49.5 100.0 Faith-inspired 3.5 2.9 5.9 Faith-inspired — — — Private secular 8.5 10.2 2.2 Private secular 50.2 50.6 — Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Senegal, 2005 Mali, 2006 Public 74.7 74.0 95.3 Public 83.5 82.4 90.8 Faith-inspired 2.5 2.5 — Faith-inspired — — — Private secular 22.9 23.4 4.7 Private secular 16.5 17.6 9.2 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Swaziland, 2009/10 Uganda, 2010 Public 51.3 42.9 56.5 Public 52.8 41.8 65.6 Faith-inspired 4.5 2.4 5.9 Faith-inspired 5.0 5.9 3.9 Private secular 44.2 54.7 37.6 Private secular 42.2 52.3 30.6 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 Source: Tsimpo and Wodon 2013d. Note: — = not available. substantially so. Recall as shown in chapter 4 that the market share of FIIs in education provision at the primary level was slightly larger than that of private secular providers, and that private secular providers had on average a slightly larger market share than FIIs at the secondary level. Here private secular provid- ers have a much larger market share than FIIs at the tertiary level, even if in most countries, the largest player remains the public sector. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Role of Faith-Inspired Institutions in Tertiary Education 119 Table F.2 provides data on benefit incidence. Because few students at the ter- tiary level are from the bottom three quintiles of welfare, those quintiles have been aggregated together. The main finding is that a large majority of students attending tertiary education belong to the top quintile of well-being, as expected. This is true for all types of providers (in the case of Ghana, the issue of different benefit Table F.2  Benefit Incidence by Type of Provider, Tertiary Level percent Welfare quintile Welfare quintile Q1–Q3 Q4 Q5 Total Q1–Q3 Q4 Q5 Total Burkina, 2007 Kenya, 2005 Public — 7.7 92.3 100.0 Public 21.7 20.3 58.0 100.0 Faith-inspired — — 100.0 100.0 Faith-inspired 31.9 3.6 64.4 100.0 Private secular — 5.6 94.4 100.0 Private secular 23.9 18.5 57.6 100.0 Total — 7.2 92.8 100.0 Total 23.4 18.2 58.4 100.0 Burundi, 2006 Zambia, 2004 Public 31.3 9.6 59.2 100.0 Public 17.1 18.5 64.4 100.0 Faith-inspired — — 100.0 100.0 Faith-inspired 32.7 5.1 62.3 100.0 Private secular 4.3 11.1 84.6 100.0 Private secular 8.3 11.8 80.0 100.0 Total 17.6 10.3 72.1 100.0 Total 14.8 16.1 69.1 100.0 Cameroon, 2007 Congo, Rep., 2005 Public 6.1 19.6 74.4 100.0 Public 39.9 26.8 33.3 100.0 Faith-inspired — 18.0 82.0 100.0 Faith-inspired 89.6 — 10.4 100.0 Private secular 4.0 7.2 88.9 100.0 Private secular 36.7 28.1 35.2 100.0 Total 5.7 18.3 76.0 100.0 Total 39.6 26.9 33.6 100.0 Ghana, 2003 Nigeria 2003/04 Public 36.1 29.8 34.1 100.0 Public 18.4 24.4 57.2 100.0 Faith-inspired 45.1 46.8 8.1 100.0 Faith-inspired — — 100.0 100.0 Private secular 10.9 53.5 35.6 100.0 Private secular 15.0 17.2 67.8 100.0 Total 35.0 31.3 33.7 100.0 Total 18.1 23.8 58.1 100.0 Ghana, 2005/06 Niger, 2007 Public 20.8 15.1 64.1 100.0 Public — 18.3 81.7 100.0 Faith-inspired — 28.1 72.0 100.0 Faith-inspired — — — — Private secular 8.0 15.3 76.6 100.0 Private secular 4.4 7.1 88.6 100.0 Total 19.0 15.6 65.4 100.0 Total 2.2 12.7 85.1 100.0 Senegal, 2005 Mali, 2006 Public 12.4 21.0 66.6 100.0 Public 15.8 25.8 58.4 100.0 Faith-inspired 0.7 — 99.3 100.0 Faith-inspired — — — — Private secular 2.6 2.7 94.8 100.0 Private secular — 3.4 96.6 100.0 Total 9.8 16.3 73.9 100.0 Total 13.2 22.1 64.7 100.0 Swaziland, 2009/10 Uganda, 2010 Public 19.4 34.3 46.4 100.0 Public 11.8 9.7 78.4 100.0 Faith-inspired — — 100.0 100.0 Faith-inspired 11.4 19.9 68.7 100.0 Private secular 9.5 16.0 74.5 100.0 Private secular 9.9 7.8 82.4 100.0 Total 14.1 24.6 61.3 100.0 Total 11.0 9.4 79.6 100.0 Source: Tsimpo and Wodon 2013d. Note: — = not available. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 120 Role of Faith-Inspired Institutions in Tertiary Education incidence results obtained with the Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire [CWIQ] and Ghana Living Standard Survey, Fifth Round [GLSS5] surveys comes up again). In addition, in some of the countries, private secular providers tend to reach slightly better the fourth and first three quintiles than is the case for FIIs, which may be related to the higher concentration of students located in urban areas in the clientele of FIIs, as mentioned earlier. However, sample sizes are small, especially in the bottom quintiles, and especially for FIIs given their smaller market share, so that the results for lower quintiles for FIIs may not be very robust at the country level. What seems robust as a broad conclusion is the fact that whether tertiary education providers are faith-inspired, private secular, or public institu- tions, they do not tend to reach the poor much in all of the countries considered. What about cost? The results are provided in local currencies in table F.3. Again, the most reliable results are those obtained for the sample as a whole, as opposed to by quintile, or location. As expected, private secular providers tend Table F.3  Cost of Tertiary Education by Type of Provider, Local Currencies Location Welfare quintile Urban Rural Q1–Q3 Q4 Q5 Total Burundi, 2006 Public 36,307 5,567 8,088 — 32,400 22,554 Faith-inspired — — — — — — Private secular 90,384 55,119 6,000 4,500 97,678 83,373 Total 68,116 20,969 7,829 2,737 69,954 52,984 Cameroon, 2007 Public 70,804 59,331 53,743 63,008 72,588 69,554 Faith-inspired 384,789 305,000 — 652,295 315,730 376,270 Private secular 384,826 815,000 325,000 249,512 417,760 402,036 Total 110,481 94,082 72,655 80,605 118,391 108,810 Ghana, 2005/06 Public 1,443,721 1,289,946 1,264,566 1,440,402 1,449,144 1,409,435 Faith-inspired 721,861 3,200,000 — 889,058 1,888,333 1,608,040 Private secular 1,293,348 — 1,316,445 — 1,454,707 1,220,427 Total 1,407,487 1,374,301 1,266,432 1,284,846 1,466,811 1,400,400 Swaziland, 2009/10 Public 2,074 1,583 1,532 989 2,385 1,742 Faith-inspired 119 2,963 — — 2,381 2,381 Private secular 4,982 3,411 972 1,880 5,059 4,163 Total 3,617 2,351 1,366 1,245 3,823 2,841 Kenya, 2005 Public 18,225 17,289 8,798 14,708 22,133 17,734 Faith-inspired 14,213 11,221 3,653 13,861 17,302 12,818 Private secular 18,495 8,629 6,741 7,001 19,427 14,094 Total 17,968 13,744 7,374 11,677 20,639 15,903 table continues next page Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Role of Faith-Inspired Institutions in Tertiary Education 121 Table F.3  Cost of Tertiary Education by Type of Provider, Local Currencies (continued) Location Welfare quintile Urban Rural Q1–Q3 Q4 Q5 Total Nigeria 2003/04 Public 18,618 14,244 10,883 16,313 20,553 17,737 Faith-inspired 16,000 — — — 16,000 16,000 Private secular 24,168 26,556 10,210 18,254 29,187 24,453 Total 19,079 14,824 10,840 16,421 21,312 18,250 Uganda, 2010 Public 1,243,609 884,634 313,612 897,834 1,291,877 1,095,351 Faith-inspired 951,616 800,162 300,000 535,889 130,0913 897,704 Private secular 2,165,193 1,867,061 744,743 1,757,149 2,238,833 2,077,784 Total 1,730,305 1,292,881 459,780 1,176,364 1,806,479 1,577,287 Source: Tsimpo and Wodon 2013d. Note: — = not available. to be more costly than public institutions, although this does not seem to be the case in Ghana and Kenya. The differences between FIIs and private secular pro- viders tend to be smaller, and in all countries except Ghana, the average cost for FIIs is lower than for private secular institutions. Of course, cost may depend on the type of tertiary education acquired, but the data do not permit such differ- entiation. Thus the data suggest that FIIs are in general more expensive than public institutions, but less expensive than private secular institutions, as observed for primary and secondary education in chapter 6. Finally, what about the satisfaction of students with the education received? The results are provided in table F.4. As for cost, the results appear to be in line with what was observed for primary and secondary education, in that satisfaction levels obtained by FIIs tend to be higher than those obtained by public institu- tions, and somewhat close to those obtained by private secular institutions. The same caveat as to small sample sizes applies, so one should be careful not to derive too much from the results, especially in the countries listed that have limited shares of students in tertiary institutions that are faith inspired and also limited sample sizes (the main exception being the large Ghana 2003 CWIQ survey). But the results confirm what was obtained for other levels of education, as well as anecdotal evidence. Thus, to conclude, while the market share of FIIs at the tertiary level appears to be lower than is the case for primary and second- ary education (with the market share of private secular institutions being higher at that level), it is clear than the incidence of the benefits of tertiary education is highly titled towards the top quintile for all types of providers and all countries. In addition, the cost and satisfaction patterns observed for FIIs and private secu- lar institutions mirror what is happening at the lower levels of education, that is FIIs are more expensive than public institutions, but often less expensive than private secular institutions, and they tend to have higher satisfaction rates among their students than public institutions, as is the case for private secular providers. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 122 Role of Faith-Inspired Institutions in Tertiary Education Table F.4  Satisfaction with Tertiary Education by Type of Provider percent Location Welfare quintile Urban Rural Q1–Q3 Q4 Q5 Total Burkina, 2007 Public 59.5 44.1 — 83.9 57.2 59.2 Faith-inspired 100.0 — — — 100.0 100.0 Private secular 87.8 — — 45.8 90.3 87.8 Total 65.0 44.1 — 78.6 63.6 64.7 Burundi, 2006 Public 76.2 54.2 52.6 8.3 83.0 64.9 Faith-inspired — — — — — — Private secular 72.1 24.6 0.0 0.0 74.3 61.7 Total 73.6 45.0 46.1 3.5 77.6 63.3 Ghana, 2003 Public 71.59 75.55 75.2 70.0 71.0 72.2 Faith-inspired 93.28 83.98 92.2 95.4 46.5 90.0 Private secular 85.97 100.00 87.2 88.7 84.1 86.9 Total 72.66 76.38 75.8 72.2 71.6 73.3 Senegal, 2005 Public 75.3 56.8 65.4 63.2 79.9 74.6 Faith-inspired 100.0 — 100.0 — 100.0 100.0 Private secular 78.2 100.0 73.0 66.5 78.8 78.3 Total 76.6 58.8 66.0 63.3 80.2 76.1 Congo, Rep., 2005 Public 17.2 — 16.2 25.4 11.8 17.2 Faith-inspired 56.3 — 51.2 — 100.0 56.3 Private secular 59.9 — 46.5 71.6 64.5 59.9 Total 31.1 — 26.1 40.6 29.5 31.1 Niger, 2007 Public 90.6 100.0 — 86.8 91.6 90.7 Faith-inspired — — — — — — Private secular 98.4 — 100.0 100.0 98.2 98.4 Total 94.5 100.0 100.0 90.5 95.0 94.6 Mali, 2006 Public 49.5 38.7 40.6 50.2 49.1 48.0 Faith-inspired — — — — — — Private secular 5.5 34.9 — 37.2 6.5 7.5 Total 41.8 38.3 40.6 49.9 38.6 41.3 Source: Tsimpo and Wodon 2013d. Note: — = not available. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Appendix G Detailed Regression Estimates This appendix provides the detailed regression results for the analysis com- mented upon in the main text. In chapter 6, the text refers to regressions esti- mated on the correlates of the cost of education in Ghana. The full results are in tables G.1 with bootstrapping. In chapter 7, the text refers to regressions esti- mated on the correlates of the subjective perceptions of literacy and numeracy for 10–15 years old in primary schools in Ghana in 2005/06, again with boot- strapping. The full results are in table G.2. In chapter 6, the text refers to regres- sions on school enrollment for children with disability. The full results are in table G.3. Table G.1  Correlates of the Cost of Education for Households, Ghana, 2005/06 Tobit with bootstrapping Coefficient t-value Type of school (instr.; Ref.: Public) Religious school –6.60 –0.865 Private secular school 4.90*** 3.388 Level of well-being and interaction effects 2nd quintile 0.21 0.967 3rd quintile 0.41* 1.789 4th quintile 0.68*** 2.760 Top quintile 1.25*** 4.129 Religious × Quintile 2 6.04 0.851 Religious × Quintile 3 5.79 0.749 Religious × Quintile 4 8.35 1.099 Religious × Quintile 5 8.35 1.090 Private × Quintile 2 –1.50 –0.993 Private × Quintile 3 –1.77 –1.215 Private × Quintile 4 –2.56* –1.774 Private × Quintile 5 –3.46** –2.392 table continues next page Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   123 124 Detailed Regression Estimates Table G.1  Correlates of the Cost of Education for Households, Ghana, 2005/06 (continued) Tobit with bootstrapping Coefficient t-value Location Urban (Ref: Rural) 0.77*** 5.278 Western (Ref: Greater Accra) –0.83*** –3.215 Central –0.39 –1.385 Volta –0.76** –2.476 Eastern –0.36 –1.388 Ashanti –0.72*** –2.877 Brong Ahafo –0.33 –1.208 Northern –2.10*** –5.971 Upper East –1.79*** –4.884 Upper West –1.66*** –3.471 Gender and age of the head Male –0.02 –0.263 Age of the head –0.00 –1.360 Religion of the head Christian 0.04 0.173 Spiritualist 0.29 0.880 Muslim 0.05 0.191 Traditional –0.52 –1.190 Grade Primary 2nd year 0.27*** 2.812 Primary 3rd year 0.19* 1.827 Primary 4th year 0.31*** 2.789 Primary 5th year 0.42*** 3.302 Primary 6th year 0.58*** 3.768 Characteristics of the child Male child 0 0.0444 Oldest child 0.05 0.713 Father living in the household 0.09 0.933 Mother living in the household 0.05 0.487 Child aged 7–10 (Ref: 5–6 years old) –1.24** –2.471 Child aged 11–15 (Ref: 5–6 years old) –1.20** –2.368 Lambda (Mills) 1.22* 1.893 Constant 1.90*** 35.74 Source: Estimation based on GLSS5 2005/06 survey. See Adoho and Wodon 2013b. Note: * significance at 10 percent level, ** at the five percent level, and *** at the one percent level. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Detailed Regression Estimates 125 Table G.2  Correlates of Perceptions of Literacy and Numeracy, 10–15 Years Old (Primary), Ghana 2005/06 Can read in English Can write in English Can do written (dF/dX) (dF/dX) ­calculation (dF/dX) No No No ­instrument Instrument ­instrument Instrument ­instrument Instrument Type of school (Ref.: Public) Religious –0.048 –0.294 –0.348 –0.082* 0.005 0.007 Private 0.202* 0.205* 0.257*** 0.186** 0.042* 0.037 Religious and urban 0.124* 0.124* 0.097 0.109 0.032 0.034 Private and urban –0.13*** 0.105*** 0.079 –0.108* –0.074 –0.003 Urban 0.125*** 0.099*** 0.108*** 0.133*** 0.029** 0.023* Region (Ref.: Greater Accra) Western –0.119 –0.095 –0.072 –0.094 –0.052 –0.045 Central –0.199** –0.175** –0.114* –0.138 –0.017 –0.012 Volta –0.294*** –0.272*** –0.245*** –0.269*** –0.034 –0.028 Eastern –0.264*** –0.231*** –0.234*** –0.269*** –0.025 –0.019 Ashanti –0.19** –0.172** –0.101* –0.124 0.000 0.003 Brong Ahafo –0.187** –0.161** –0.131** –0.164* –0.049 –0.044 Northern –0.125 –0.091 –0.135** –0.181 –0.146*** –0.137** Upper East –0.062 –0.032 –0.077 –0.121 –0.082* –0.076 Upper West –0.020 –0.008 –0.043 –0.067 –0.026 –0.023 Level of well-being (Ref.: 1st quintile) Quintile 2 –0.006 –0.001 –0.021 –0.025 –0.001 –0.001 Quintile 3 0.030 0.032 0.008 0.006 0.001 0.000 Quintile 4 0.082** 0.088** 0.051 0.049 0.023* 0.022 Quintile 5 0.098*** 0.113*** 0.108** 0.092** 0.032** 0.032* Faith affiliation (Ref.: No religion) Christian 0.077 0.073 0.066 0.070 0.057** 0.057** Spiritualist 0.061 0.060 0.077 0.082 0.017 0.018 Muslim 0.012 0.017 0.016 0.013 0.033 0.034* Traditional 0.062 0.049 0.051 0.067 0.032 0.032 Sex, rank, and age of the child Boy 0.043** 0.04** 0.039** 0.042** 0.023*** 0.024*** Child is oldest in household –0.001 0.001 –0.009 –0.008 0.005 0.006 Child is between 11 and 15 years of age 0.028 0.025 0.023 0.024 0.018 0.019* Presence of child’s parents at home Father is living in the household –0.024 –0.028 –0.040 –0.032 –0.004 –0.005 Mother is living in the household 0.023 0.022 0.033 0.032 0.025* 0.024* Time use of the child Time spent for housekeeping 0.001** 0.001** 0.001* 0.001** 0.001** 0.001** Time spent on homework –0.001 –0.001 0.001 0.001 –0.000 –0.000 Time to go to and back from school 0.006 0.008 0.006 0.004 0.002 0.003 table continues next page Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 126 Detailed Regression Estimates Table G.2  Correlates of Perceptions of Literacy and Numeracy, 10–15 Years Old (Primary), Ghana 2005/06 (continued) Can read in English Can write in English Can do written (dF/dX) (dF/dX) ­calculation (dF/dX) No No No ­instrument Instrument ­instrument Instrument ­instrument Instrument Payment of education fees Father pays the most 0.031 0.036 0.020 0.014 –0.007 –0.006 Mother pays the most 0.002 0.005 –0.020 –0.023 –0.029 –0.029 Both parent pay the most 0.018 0.028 –0.007 –0.018 0.006 0.007 Grade (Ref.: 2nd year) Primary 3rd year 0.156*** 0.156*** 0.16*** 0.159*** 0.031*** 0.032*** Primary 4th year 0.208*** 0.209*** 0.257*** 0.256*** 0.041*** 0.042*** Primary 5th year 0.266*** 0.267*** 0.327*** 0.326*** 0.061*** 0.062*** Primary 6th year 0.312*** 0.313*** 0.384*** 0.384*** 0.069*** 0.07*** Education of head (Ref.: No education) Primary 0.018 0.019 0.020 0.019 –0.002 –0.002 JSSS/M 0.064** 0.064** 0.042 0.039 –0.001 –0.001 SSS/S/U/L 0.063 0.07 0.081 0.074 –0.018 –0.019 Voc/tech/compu/comm/agri 0.135 0.133 0.090 0.090 Teaching/nursing training 0.015 0.016 0.137** 0.135** 0.028 0.028 Polytech/university/other tertiary 0.096 0.096 0.049 0.057 0.006 0.007 Education of spouse (Ref.: No education) Primary 0.029 0.026 0.010 0.012 0.008 0.007 JSSS/M 0.084*** 0.083*** 0.082*** 0.085*** 0.023* 0.024* Higher/other education level 0.065** 0.063** 0.044 0.049 0.023 0.023 Source: Estimation based on GLSS5 2005/06 survey. See Adoho and Wodon (2013c). Note: * indicates statistical significance at the 10 percent level, ** at the 5 percent level, and *** at the 1 percent level. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Table G.3  Correlates of School Enrollment and Impact of Disability, Ghana 2003 Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Religious Private Not enrolled Religious Private Not enrolled Religious Private Not enrolled Disability Status Child is disabled 0.0109* –0.0048 0.1270*** 0.0134* 0.0052 0.0351 0.0127* 0.0053 0.0504** Severity of disability (Ref.: Mild) Moderate –0.0045 0.0031 0.0735** –0.0048 0.0034 0.0725** Severe –0.0029 –0.0647*** 0.2675*** –0.0028 –0.0640*** 0.2655*** Disability and poverty interaction Disabled and in the first two ­quintiles 0.0035 –0.0077 –0.0478* Sex of the child (Ref.: Female) Male –0.0016 0.0050*** –0.0459*** –0.0016 0.0050*** –0.0459*** –0.0016 0.0050*** –0.0459*** Disability and sex interaction Child is Male and disabled –0.0249** –0.0071 –0.0100 –0.0247** –0.0058 –0.0118 –0.0251** –0.0057 –0.0074 Age of the child Age of the child 0.0057*** 0.0087*** –0.1601*** 0.0057*** 0.0087*** –0.1604*** 0.0057*** 0.0087*** –0.1604*** Age of the child squared –0.0004*** –0.0007*** 0.0077*** –0.0004*** –0.0008*** 0.0077*** –0.0004*** –0.0008*** 0.0077*** Nearest prim. school (Ref.:< 15’) 15–29 minutes –0.0024 –0.0011 0.0421*** –0.0024 –0.0012 0.0425*** –0.0024 –0.0012 0.0425*** 30–44 minutes –0.0079*** –0.0070** 0.0806*** –0.0079*** –0.0070** 0.0808*** –0.0079*** –0.0070** 0.0808*** 45+ minutes –0.0110*** –0.0040 0.1976*** –0.0110*** –0.0040 0.1976*** –0.0110*** –0.0040 0.1975*** Residence (Ref.: Rural) Urban –0.0282*** –0.0499*** 0.0518*** –0.0282*** –0.0499*** 0.0517*** –0.0282*** –0.0499*** 0.0517*** Region (Ref.: Greater Accra) Western 0.0015 –0.0208*** –0.0191* 0.0015 –0.0206*** –0.0201** 0.0015 –0.0206*** –0.0200** Central 0.0195*** –0.0196*** –0.0478*** 0.0195*** –0.0196*** –0.0477*** 0.0195*** –0.0196*** –0.0477*** 127 table continues next page Table G.3  Correlates of School Enrollment and Impact of Disability, Ghana 2003 (continued) 128 Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Religious Private Not enrolled Religious Private Not enrolled Religious Private Not enrolled Volta 0.0011 –0.0546*** 0.0154 0.0012 –0.0545*** 0.0149 0.0011 –0.0545*** 0.0150 Eastern 0.0187*** –0.0406*** –0.0267*** 0.0187*** –0.0404*** –0.0275*** 0.0187*** –0.0404*** –0.0274*** Ashanti 0.0115*** –0.0230*** –0.0280*** 0.0115*** –0.0229*** –0.0283*** 0.0115*** –0.0229*** –0.0282*** Brong Ahafo 0.0051 –0.0261*** –0.0330*** 0.0051 –0.0260*** –0.0334*** 0.0051 –0.0260*** –0.0332*** Northern 0.0252*** –0.1107*** 0.1444*** 0.0252*** –0.1105*** 0.1443*** 0.0252*** –0.1105*** 0.1441*** Upper east 0.0035 –0.1349*** 0.0647*** 0.0035 –0.1347*** 0.0642*** 0.0035 –0.1347*** 0.0641*** Upper west 0.0659*** –0.1212*** 0.0996*** 0.0659*** –0.1209*** 0.0992*** 0.0659*** –0.1209*** 0.0992*** Household demographics Number of children 0–4 years old –0.0005 0.0014 0.0096*** –0.0005 0.0014 0.0096*** –0.0005 0.0014 0.0096*** Number of children 5–14 years old –0.0006 0.0013** 0.0051*** –0.0006 0.0013** 0.0051*** –0.0006 0.0013** 0.0051*** Number of adults 15–59 years old 0.0008* 0.0036*** –0.0023** 0.0008* 0.0036*** –0.0023** 0.0008* 0.0036*** –0.0023** Number of seniors 60+ years –0.0041** 0.0004 –0.0052 –0.0041** 0.0004 –0.0051 –0.0041** 0.0004 –0.0050 Sex of head (Ref.: Female) Male –0.0037** –0.0046*** 0.0427*** –0.0037** –0.0047*** 0.0431*** –0.0037** –0.0047*** 0.0432*** Age of household head Age of head –0.0006* –0.0006* –0.0013* –0.0006* –0.0006* –0.0013* –0.0006* –0.0006* –0.0013* Age of head squared 0** 0 0 0** 0 0 0** 0 0 Employment of head (Ref.: Unemployed) Public –0.0026 0.0057* –0.0900*** –0.0025 0.0057* –0.0904*** –0.0026 0.0057* –0.0903*** Private formal 0.0011 0.0180*** –0.0218** 0.0011 0.0180*** –0.0220** 0.0011 0.0180*** –0.0219** Private informal –0.0082*** –0.0024 0.0006 –0.0082*** –0.0024 0.0006 –0.0082*** –0.0024 0.0006 Self–agriculture 0.0030 –0.0586** 0.0328 0.0030 –0.0586** 0.0332 0.0030 –0.0586** 0.0333 Self–other 0.0108 –0.0182 –0.0534 0.0108 –0.0187 –0.0532 0.0109 –0.0187 –0.0533 Other –0.0083 0.0276*** –0.0881*** –0.0083 0.0276*** –0.0872*** –0.0083 0.0276*** –0.0866*** table continues next page Table G.3  Correlates of School Enrollment and Impact of Disability, Ghana 2003 (continued) Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Religious Private Not enrolled Religious Private Not enrolled Religious Private Not enrolled Education of head (Ref.: No education) Primary 1–3 0.0051 0.0209*** –0.0928*** 0.0051 0.0210*** –0.0932*** 0.0051 0.0210*** –0.0932*** Primary 4–6 0.0054* 0.0158*** –0.0729*** 0.0054* 0.0159*** –0.0730*** 0.0054* 0.0158*** –0.0731*** JSS 1–3 –0.0003 0.0209*** –0.0828*** –0.0004 0.0209*** –0.0826*** –0.0004 0.0209*** –0.0825*** Middle 1–4 0.0126*** 0.0311*** –0.1474*** 0.0126*** 0.0311*** –0.1477*** 0.0126*** 0.0310*** –0.1478*** SSS 1–3 0.0067 0.0533*** –0.1458*** 0.0067 0.0532*** –0.1451*** 0.0067 0.0532*** –0.1451*** Secondary 1–5 0.0183*** 0.0536*** –0.2009*** 0.0183*** 0.0535*** –0.2003*** 0.0183*** 0.0535*** –0.2006*** Lower/upper 0.0136** 0.0488*** –0.1413*** 0.0135** 0.0487*** –0.1402*** 0.0135** 0.0487*** –0.1405*** Voc/tech/com/agr. 0.0249*** 0.0461*** –0.1712*** 0.0249*** 0.0461*** –0.1713*** 0.0249*** 0.0461*** –0.1714*** Teaching training 0.0050 0.0315*** –0.1979*** 0.0050 0.0314*** –0.1969*** 0.0050 0.0314*** –0.1970*** Nursing 0.0197** 0.0608*** –0.1062*** 0.0197** 0.0605*** –0.1049*** 0.0197** 0.0605*** –0.1050*** Tertiary 0.0187*** 0.0607*** –0.1505*** 0.0186*** 0.0605*** –0.1498*** 0.0187*** 0.0605*** –0.1501*** Level of well-being (Ref.: 1st quintile) 2nd quintile 0.0050*** 0.0278*** –0.0765*** 0.0050*** 0.0277*** –0.0762*** 0.0050*** 0.0277*** –0.0771*** 3rd quintile 0.0025 0.0441*** –0.0875*** 0.0025 0.0440*** –0.0872*** 0.0025 0.0439*** –0.0881*** 4th quintile 0.0036 0.0597*** –0.0882*** 0.0036 0.0596*** –0.0877*** 0.0036 0.0595*** –0.0886*** Top quintile 0.0113*** 0.0654*** –0.0593*** 0.0113*** 0.0654*** –0.0596*** 0.0114*** 0.0653*** –0.0604*** Constant –0.0768*** –0.0608*** 0.6473*** –0.0768*** –0.0612*** 0.6493*** –0.0769*** –0.0611*** 0.6499*** Number of observations 79452 79452 79452 79452 79452 79452 79452 79452 79452 Source: Estimation based on GLSS5 2005/06 survey. See Adoho and Wodon 2013a. Note: * indicates statistical significance at the 10 percent level, ** at the 5 percent level, and *** at the 1 percent level. 129 Appendix H Illegitimate Fees in Service Delivery The issue of illegitimate fees or petty corruption in service delivery is widespread in developing countries, including in Sub-Saharan Africa. In principle, when households are asked in surveys how much they spend on education, this should include any illegitimate fees that they may have had to provide to service provid- ers. However, most surveys do not have information that permits the estimation of the magnitude of such illegitimate fees separately from other expenditures. This section provides two examples of analysis related to petty corruption. The first from Sierra Leone suggests that illegitimate fees may be widespread, includ- ing in education service delivery. The second from Cameroon suggests that the likelihood of having to pay illegitimate fees may be (slightly) less frequent among users of services provided by faith-inspired schools (FISs), as compared to public and other private secular education providers. Consider first the case of Sierra Leone. Through a collaboration between the government and the World Bank Institute on governance, three separate surveys were implemented in 2003 to measure the extent of corruption. The three sur- veys are based on interviews with respectively 1,800 households, 600 firms, and 590 public officials. In this appendix, only the household survey is used. One of the questions asked to households in the survey directly relates to the “gratifica- tions” paid by households when using a range of services. While gratifications may not necessarily represent corruption, they are typically not to be paid to service providers or their staffs. It is however possible that in some cases, gratifi- cations represent legitimate payments. The health sector comes to mind. Given that in the survey 90 percent of users declare paying gratifications for public health services, it could be that part of this is related to healthcare cost recovery (public expenditures on healthcare in Sierra Leone are low, focusing mostly on salaries so that cost recovery is often used for basic supplies and medication). Thus, in the case of healthcare, it may not be appropriate to label these payments as corruption, and it remains an open issue as to whether these payments should be abolished or not. Yet in many sectors, the payments considered by households as gratifications are likely to be illegitimate. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1   131 132 Illegitimate Fees in Service Delivery In order to assess the frequency and level of these gratifications, three ques- tions in the survey can be used: (1) During the last year, approximately how many times has anyone in your household contacted the institution concerning the services that the public institution provides?; (2) Of these total contacts, on average, how many times were you required to pay a gratification?; and (3) how much did you have to pay as gratification each time you made official payments in Leones? (in equivalent value if it took the form of gift or other favor?) These three questions are asked for many services, most of which are provided by the public sector or quasi-public providers. There is also a follow up question worded as follows: “Given the present situation, many have told us candidly that they are obliged to make gratifications to public officials. How much do you think is typically spent each month on gratifications to public officials?” This information is asked both as an amount, and as a percentage of total household income. There are thus two different ways to compute the level of gratifications paid by households, first by summing up all gratifications declared to be paid for the various services used by the household, and second by using the aggregate approximate amount paid in gratifications declared by the household. It is likely that the first measure will lead to a higher estimate of the gratifications paid than the aggregate measure provided by the household, given that when declaring an aggregate value, house- holds may well forget some of the gratifications that they have had to pay. It turns out that the amounts of gratifications that have to be paid by house- holds to benefit from public services are not negligible in comparison with their total income. Table H.1 provides the estimates of the amounts paid as a share of the total income of the household. In order to not have extreme (and probably erroneous) values affecting the estimation, for any specific service or for all ser- vices as a whole, it has been assumed that a household cannot and has not paid more than 25 percent of its income for gratifications. In the first row of the table, the share of total income allocated to gratifications is computed using the sum- mation approach by adding all the gratifications paid for different services. The data suggest that 5.4 percent of total income may be used for gratification, but the proportion is much higher for the poor (at 11.9 percent) than for the non- poor (at 4.0 percent). In the second row of the table, the same procedure is used, but for those households for which there is a missing value as to their total income in the survey, an imputed income was estimated using a simple regression analysis. The estimates are similar, with gratifications representing 5.9 percent of total income on average, again with higher estimates for the poor than the non- poor. Finally, when using the summary question on all gratifications paid, gratifications represent 2.9 percent of total household income, and in this case ­ differences between the poor and the nonpoor are small. Overall, these amounts from 3 percent to 6 percent of total income are not negligible, especially for the poor. Given the limited ability to pay such gratifications among the poor, the issue is serious. There are differences between services in the shares of individuals using the services who have to pay gratifications. The shares of household paying gratifica- tions varies widely according to the services used. They are very high for health Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Illegitimate Fees in Service Delivery 133 Table H.1 Gratifications Paid as a Share of Total Income, Sierra Leone 2003 percent Mean share Minimum value Maximum value National Share in raw data with 25% income share cap 5.4 0.3 25.0 Share with imputed income with 25% cap 5.9 0.3 25.0 Share as overall estimate with 25% cap 2.9 0 25.0 Nonpoor Share in raw data with 25% income share cap 4.0 0.3 25.0 Share with imputed income with 25% cap 4.2 0.3 25.0 Share as overall estimate with 25% cap 3.2 0 25.0 Poor Share in raw data with 25% income share cap 11.9 1.3 25.0 Share with imputed income with 25% cap 11.5 1.3 25.0 Share as overall estimate with 25% cap 2.6 0 25.0 Source: Author’s estimation using 2003 Sierra Leone Governance survey. services (above 90 percent of users pay gratifications), and high as well for a wide range of other services (traffic police, other police, judges and court officials, income tax department, and so on). Except in the case of pensions, where no gratifications appear to be paid (possibly because pensions are of a fixed amount and are to be paid on regular intervals without the need to intervene), about 30 percent or more of service users pay gratification for the services. In the case of public education, gratifications are paid by almost 40 percent of the house- holds. The amounts paid per year are highest for the income tax department and for the police (excluding the traffic police), at about 30,000 Le, and lowest for health services, at slightly more than 5,000 Le (at the time of the survey, the exchange rate was approximately Le 2,000 per US dollar). In the case of educa- tion, they are at about 10,000 Leones per household. For a typical household, the total amount paid across services almost reaches 35,000 Le per year on aver- age. While this may not seem to be a large amount, it represents resources that households could valuably allocate to other goods and services. Given that income levels are low in Sierra Leone (two thirds of the population is poor), the burden represented by gratifications is real. Consider now the second example, related to education service delivery in Cameroon. In the ECAM 2 survey for 2001, two questions are asked to house- holds as to whether they have paid nonregulatory fees for education—the ­ language is meant to identify illegitimate fees, that is petty corruption. Information is available on whether households did pay illegitimate fees, but not on the amount of fees paid. Because the survey also includes information on the types of service providers used by households, including both faith-inspired and secular private providers apart from public providers, it is feasible to assess whether the degree of petty corruption is lower among FISs than among other providers. The question is asked at the household level, and a household may Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 134 Illegitimate Fees in Service Delivery have several children attending different types of school, possibly from different types of providers. Still, while it is necessary to conduct the analysis at the house- hold rather than at the child or household member level, it remains feasible to distinguish households sending all their children to public schools, from those sending all their children to FISs or private secular schools, and those sending some children to one type of school and other children to another type of school. The results for education are provided in table H.2. Private faith-inspired schools have the lowest proportion of households declaring paying illegitimate fees, at 15.5 percent. For private secular schools the proportion is at 17.1 percent, and for public schools it is at 20.4 percent. For households relying on a combina- tion of schools, the proportions are even higher, but this makes sense since when using more than one type of school, the household is likely to interact with more schools and staffs, and thereby is more likely to have to pay illegitimate fees. Again, it could very well be that some of the fees are actually legitimate. Note that the probability of paying illegitimate fees tends to be higher in the higher quintiles as well as in urban areas as compared to rural areas, suggesting that the ability to pay such fees plays a role in whether fees are paid by households, which may also give better off households an advantage for their children in school (there is anecdotal evidence in the literature on the role that such illegitimate fees may play in the types of grades that a child may receive from a teacher, for example for qualifying examinations). For the purpose of this study, the data in table H.2 provide at least some evidence that the level of petty corruption in FISs may perhaps be lower than in other types of schools. Table H.2  Share of Households Paying Illegitimate School Fees, Cameroon 2001 percent Quintile Location Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Urban Rural All Public 14.1 19.1 18.2 27.4 24.2 31.1 16.0 20.4 Private faith-inspired 1.8 15.6 16.7 24.6 17.6 23.1 12.8 15.5 Private secular 16.3 5.3 26.6 20.1 16.2 19.5 10.2 17.1 Faith inspired and private secular 11.3 12.0 11.7 21.1 36.1 26.1 11.1 21.0 Public and at least one private 15.5 23.4 31.0 36.5 37.4 38.2 19.0 31.2 No children in school 2.5 1.4 4.3 6.5 7.3 8.8 4.1 5.5 All 10.4 13.2 14.7 18.5 15.4 22.9 10.5 14.9 Source: Tsimpo and Wodon 2013c. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 References Adoho, F., and Q. 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Washington, DC: World Bank. World Bank. 2001. World Development Report 2000/2001: Attacking Poverty. Washington, DC: World Bank. ———. 2004. World Development Report 2004: Making Services Work for Poor People. Washington, DC: World Bank. ———. 2005. Education in the Democratic Republic of Congo: Priorities and Options for Regeneration. Washington, DC: World Bank. Yaro, Y. 1994. “Les stratégies scolaires des ménages au Burkina Faso.” Cahiers des Sciences Humaines 31 (3): 675–96. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 Environmental Benefits Statement The World Bank is committed to reducing its environmental footprint. In support of this commitment, the Publishing and Knowledge Division leverages electronic publishing options and print-on-demand technology, which is located in regional hubs worldwide. Together, these initiatives enable print runs to be lowered and shipping distances decreased, resulting in reduced paper consumption, chemical use, greenhouse gas emissions, and waste. The Publishing and Knowledge Division follows the recommended standards for paper use set by the Green Press Initiative. Whenever possible, books are printed on 50 percent to 100 percent postconsumer recycled paper, and at least 50 percent of the fiber in our book paper is either unbleached or bleached using Totally Chlorine Free (TCF), Processed Chlorine Free (PCF), or Enhanced Elemental Chlorine Free (EECF) processes. More information about the Bank’s environmental philosophy can be found at http://crinfo.worldbank.org/wbcrinfo/node/4. Education in Sub-Saharan Africa  •  http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-0-8213-9965-1 E ducation in Sub-Saharan Africa: Comparing Faith-Inspired, Private Secular, and Public Schools is part of the World Bank Studies series. These papers are published to communicate the results of the Bank’s ongoing research and to stimulate public discussion. The purpose of this study is to build a stronger evidence base on the role of faith-inspired, private secular, and public schools in sub-Saharan Africa using nationally representative household surveys as well as qualitative data. Six main findings emerge from the study: 1. Across a sample of 16 countries, the average market share for faith-inspired schools is at 10–15 percent, and the market share for private secular schools is of a similar order of magnitude. 2. On average, faith-inspired schools do not reach the poor more than other groups; they also do not reach the poor more than public schools, but they do reach the poor significantly more than private secular schools. 3. The cost of faith-inspired schools for households is higher than that of public schools, possibly because of a lack of access to public funding, but lower than that of private secular schools. 4. Faith-inspired and private secular schools have higher satisfaction rates among parents than public schools. 5. Parents using faith-inspired schools place a stronger emphasis on religious education and moral values. 6. Students in faith-inspired and private secular schools perform better than those in public schools, but this may be due in part to self-selection. World Bank Studies are available individually or on standing order. This World Bank Studies series is also available online through the World Bank e-library (www.worldbank.org/elibrary). ISBN 978-0-8213-9965-1 SKU 19965