Series: Africa Growth Initiative Working Papers | Number 3 of 5 « Previous | Next »

The High Return to Private Schooling in a Low-Income Country

Despite widespread policy interest in market solutions to public service delivery, a large literature on the effect of private schooling on academic achievement shows little or no causal benefit. In a much-cited paper, Hsieh and Urquiola (2006) find that a voucher program that dramatically expanded private schooling in Chile led to no discernible increase in test scores over time. In the U.S., Altonji, Elder, and Taber (2005) find little or no impact of Catholic schooling on test scores after controlling for selection effects. Similarly for Indonesia, Newhouse and Beegle (2011) find that private schooling has a significant, negative effect on test scores. Angrist, Bettinger, Bloom, King, and Kremer (2002) find significantly positive, but modest, effects from a policy experiment in Colombia, with recipients of randomly allocated vouchers scoring roughly 0.2 standard deviations higher than non-recipients.

Highlights

  • Over the past decade, private school enrollment has grown rapidly in Kenya.
  • The superior performance of private schools may reflect an advantage in terms of financial and human resources.
  • Nearly two-thirds of pupils in the private system pay fees less than the median per-pupil funding level in
    government schools.

In this paper we demonstrate that in a low-income African country with weak public sector institutions, i.e., Kenya, the effect on test scores of moving to private schooling may be dramatically higher than found in previous work in the U.S., Latin America or Asia.

Over the past decade, private school enrollment has grown rapidly in Kenya. In a companion paper, we argue that this secular trend was driven, somewhat paradoxically, by the abolition of fees in public primary schools in 2003 and the concomitant decline in the perceived quality of public schools (Bold, Kimenyi, Mwabu, and Sandefur 2011).

The main contribution of the paper lies in estimating the causal effect of private schooling on test performance for Kenyan primary school students using nationwide standardized test scores. An obvious obstacle here is the endogenous sorting of pupils. The key to our identification strategy is aggregation in the spirit of Hsieh and Urquiola (2006). The growth of private enrollment will only affect average scores in a district—aggregating over both public and private schools—inasmuch as there is a genuine causal force at work. Controlling for time-invariant district characteristics, we document a large performance advantage of Kenyan private schools, equivalent to a full standard deviation of pupil- level test scores.

Furthermore, we use survey data on households’ education expenditure to show that Kenyan private schools operate at low cost relative to public schools: Nearly two-thirds of pupils in the private system pay fees less than the median per-pupil funding level in government schools.

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SERIES: Africa Growth Initiative Working Papers | Number 3