The Structure of Social Disparities in Education : Gender and Wealth
Using internationally comparable household data sets (Demographic and Health Surveys), the author investigates how gender and wealth interact to generate within country inequalities in educational enrollment and attainment. He carries out multivari...
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/01/439014/structure-social-disparities-education-gender-wealth http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18813 |
Summary: | Using internationally comparable
household data sets (Demographic and Health Surveys), the
author investigates how gender and wealth interact to
generate within country inequalities in educational
enrollment and attainment. He carries out multivariate
analysis to assess the partial relationship between
educational outcomes and gender, wealth, household
characteristics (including level of education of adults, in
the households), and community characteristics (including
the presence of schools in the community). He finds that: 1)
women are at a great educational disadvantage in countries
in South Asia and North, Western, and Central Africa. 2)
Gender gaps are large in a subset of countries, but wealth
gaps are large in almost all of the countries studied.
Moreover, in some countries where there is a heavy female
disadvantage in enrollment (Egypt, India, Morocco, Niger,
and Pakistan), wealth interacts with gender to exacerbate
the gap in the educational outcomes. In India, for example,
where there is a 2.5 percentage point difference between
male and female enrollment for children from the richest
households, the difference is 34 percentage points for
children from the poorest households. 3) The education level
of adults in the household has a significant impact on the
enrollment of children in all the countries studied, even
after controlling for wealth. The effect of the educational
level of adult female is larger than that of the education
level of adult males in some, but not all, of the countries
studied. 4) The presence of a primary and a secondary school
in the community has a significant relationship with
enrollment in some countries only (notably in Western and
Central Africa). The relationship appears not to
systematically differ by children's gender. |
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