Nigeria - A Review of the Costs and Financing of Public Education : Volume 1. Executive Summary

Since the reintroduction of multiparty democracy in 1999, the federal and state governments in Nigeria have embarked on a series of major educational reforms. These are intended to achieve universal basic education and improve the quality and relev...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Education Sector Review
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/03/9321978/nigeria-review-costs-financing-public-education-vol-1-2-executive-summary
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8000
id okr-10986-8000
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-80002021-04-23T14:02:36Z Nigeria - A Review of the Costs and Financing of Public Education : Volume 1. Executive Summary World Bank DATA EDUCATION FOR ALL EDUCATION REFORMS ENROLLMENT DISPARITIES FINANCING LEARNING OUTCOMES PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC RESOURCES STATE OF CRISIS UNIVERSAL BASIC EDUCATION Since the reintroduction of multiparty democracy in 1999, the federal and state governments in Nigeria have embarked on a series of major educational reforms. These are intended to achieve universal basic education and improve the quality and relevance of post basic education. Faced with large rural-urban, gender, and regional disparities in enrollment and generally poor learning outcomes, the Federal Government of Nigeria introduced the Universal Basic Education (UBE) Program in 1999, with the aim of providing nine years of free, compulsory basic education comprised of six years of primary and three years of junior secondary education to all children in the country by 2015. The UBE law, which was passed in 2004, sets out the key roles and responsibilities of public agencies at all levels of government. Despite significant efforts during the past eight years, much remains to be done in the education sector, including attainment of the education for all (EFA) and education Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The Federal Ministry of Education (FME), along with all other major stakeholders, recognizes that the education sector in Nigeria is in a state of crisis and that nothing less than major renewal of all systems and institutions is required. To this end, the government launched a major education reform program in 2006, which stresses the importance of institutional reforms to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of service delivery at all levels of education. The second volume of this report addresses in depth the level and pattern of public expenditure on education in Nigeria. The first two chapters review objectives, methodology, data sources, and limitations and provide an overview of the country and the sector. The third chapter is on the costs and financing of education, and Fourth chapter on efficiency, analyzed available data on how public resources are allocated and used within the education sector. The fourth chapter also examines equity in public spending and household expenditures on education. The fifth chapter provides a conclusion and offers policy recommendations. 2012-06-14T15:08:40Z 2012-06-14T15:08:40Z 2008-03 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/03/9321978/nigeria-review-costs-financing-public-education-vol-1-2-executive-summary http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8000 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Education Sector Review Economic & Sector Work Africa Nigeria
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic DATA
EDUCATION FOR ALL
EDUCATION REFORMS
ENROLLMENT DISPARITIES
FINANCING
LEARNING OUTCOMES
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC RESOURCES
STATE OF CRISIS
UNIVERSAL BASIC EDUCATION
spellingShingle DATA
EDUCATION FOR ALL
EDUCATION REFORMS
ENROLLMENT DISPARITIES
FINANCING
LEARNING OUTCOMES
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC RESOURCES
STATE OF CRISIS
UNIVERSAL BASIC EDUCATION
World Bank
Nigeria - A Review of the Costs and Financing of Public Education : Volume 1. Executive Summary
geographic_facet Africa
Nigeria
description Since the reintroduction of multiparty democracy in 1999, the federal and state governments in Nigeria have embarked on a series of major educational reforms. These are intended to achieve universal basic education and improve the quality and relevance of post basic education. Faced with large rural-urban, gender, and regional disparities in enrollment and generally poor learning outcomes, the Federal Government of Nigeria introduced the Universal Basic Education (UBE) Program in 1999, with the aim of providing nine years of free, compulsory basic education comprised of six years of primary and three years of junior secondary education to all children in the country by 2015. The UBE law, which was passed in 2004, sets out the key roles and responsibilities of public agencies at all levels of government. Despite significant efforts during the past eight years, much remains to be done in the education sector, including attainment of the education for all (EFA) and education Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The Federal Ministry of Education (FME), along with all other major stakeholders, recognizes that the education sector in Nigeria is in a state of crisis and that nothing less than major renewal of all systems and institutions is required. To this end, the government launched a major education reform program in 2006, which stresses the importance of institutional reforms to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of service delivery at all levels of education. The second volume of this report addresses in depth the level and pattern of public expenditure on education in Nigeria. The first two chapters review objectives, methodology, data sources, and limitations and provide an overview of the country and the sector. The third chapter is on the costs and financing of education, and Fourth chapter on efficiency, analyzed available data on how public resources are allocated and used within the education sector. The fourth chapter also examines equity in public spending and household expenditures on education. The fifth chapter provides a conclusion and offers policy recommendations.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Education Sector Review
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Nigeria - A Review of the Costs and Financing of Public Education : Volume 1. Executive Summary
title_short Nigeria - A Review of the Costs and Financing of Public Education : Volume 1. Executive Summary
title_full Nigeria - A Review of the Costs and Financing of Public Education : Volume 1. Executive Summary
title_fullStr Nigeria - A Review of the Costs and Financing of Public Education : Volume 1. Executive Summary
title_full_unstemmed Nigeria - A Review of the Costs and Financing of Public Education : Volume 1. Executive Summary
title_sort nigeria - a review of the costs and financing of public education : volume 1. executive summary
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/03/9321978/nigeria-review-costs-financing-public-education-vol-1-2-executive-summary
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8000
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