The role of school fees in achieving both allocative and productive efficiency in the delivery of primary education has been a subject of intense debate. Building on a simple model that makes explicit the role of school fees in determining the optimal level of parental participation to school governance, this paper contributes to the debate by evaluating empirically the relationship between fees, participation and the accountability framework in public primary schools in Madagascar. The results show evidence that schools requiring parents to pay more fees experience a higher degree of parental participation. While results are consistent with the theoretical model, the empirical analysis provides evidence that school fees increase participat...
This study aimed at exploring the influence of fee-free education on parental and community particip...
The benefits of universal primary education (UPE)—ranging from increased personal wellbeing to socia...
This study examines conditional correlations between different types of parental involvement, namely...
The role of school fees in achieving both allocative and productive efficiency in the delivery of pr...
Among state and international actors there is consensus that early childhood education (ECE) is impo...
In 1994, the newly elected Government in Malawi abolished primary school fees. Using household surve...
This study investigated the impact of cost sharing policy on access and persistence of students in s...
The charging of school user fees is a much-debated policy issue in developing countries. In this pap...
We study a model where student effort and talent interact with parental and teachers' investments, a...
The Relative Effectiveness of Private and Public Schools in Madagascar In this paper we attempt to ...
Giving communities power over school management and spending decisions has been a favored strategy t...
In a growing number of countries of the developing world, there has been a shift in policy from fee ...
The research centres on the degree to which the no-fee-paying policy is influencing the financial ma...
The Botswana government discontinued school fees in the 1980s as an attempt to address the endemic p...
This paper studies a model where student effort and talent interact with parental and teachers' inve...
This study aimed at exploring the influence of fee-free education on parental and community particip...
The benefits of universal primary education (UPE)—ranging from increased personal wellbeing to socia...
This study examines conditional correlations between different types of parental involvement, namely...
The role of school fees in achieving both allocative and productive efficiency in the delivery of pr...
Among state and international actors there is consensus that early childhood education (ECE) is impo...
In 1994, the newly elected Government in Malawi abolished primary school fees. Using household surve...
This study investigated the impact of cost sharing policy on access and persistence of students in s...
The charging of school user fees is a much-debated policy issue in developing countries. In this pap...
We study a model where student effort and talent interact with parental and teachers' investments, a...
The Relative Effectiveness of Private and Public Schools in Madagascar In this paper we attempt to ...
Giving communities power over school management and spending decisions has been a favored strategy t...
In a growing number of countries of the developing world, there has been a shift in policy from fee ...
The research centres on the degree to which the no-fee-paying policy is influencing the financial ma...
The Botswana government discontinued school fees in the 1980s as an attempt to address the endemic p...
This paper studies a model where student effort and talent interact with parental and teachers' inve...
This study aimed at exploring the influence of fee-free education on parental and community particip...
The benefits of universal primary education (UPE)—ranging from increased personal wellbeing to socia...
This study examines conditional correlations between different types of parental involvement, namely...