Delivering Education to the Underserved through a Public-Private Partnership Program in Pakistan

We evaluate a program that recruited local entrepreneurs to open and operate new schools in 200 underserved villages in Sindh, Pakistan. School operators received a per-student subsidy to provide tuition-free primary education, and in half the villages received a higher subsidy for females. The prog...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Barrera-Osorio, Felipe, Blakeslee, David S., Hoover, Matthew, Linden, Leigh, Raju, Dhushyanth, Ryan, Stephen P.
Format: Journal Article
Published: MIT Press 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35243
Description
Summary:We evaluate a program that recruited local entrepreneurs to open and operate new schools in 200 underserved villages in Sindh, Pakistan. School operators received a per-student subsidy to provide tuition-free primary education, and in half the villages received a higher subsidy for females. The program increased enrollment by 32 percentage points, and test scores by 0.63 standard deviations, with no difference across the two subsidy schemes. Estimating a structural model of the demand and supply for school inputs, we find that program schools selected inputs similar to those of a social planner who internalizes all the education benefits to society.