A critical assessment of free public schooling in Pakistan.
Saqib, Najam Us
Free schooling financed by government funding dominated our
educational scene till the decade of 1980s. This policy was expected to
be helpful in providing universal primary education and eradicating mass
illiteracy, in addition to being conducive to equity and social justice.
The purpose of this article is to critically evaluate the performance of
this institutional arrangement, and to see how successful it was in
achieving these objectives. We look at the severity and future prognosis
of the resource constraint which is one of the major causes of the
decline of our government owned school system and examine the state of
education in which we find our country after several decades of emphasis
on free provision of schooling by the government. Implications of this
policy for educational equality and efficient resource allocation have
also been studied.
The study concludes that the resource constraint that has hampered
improvement in the availability and quality of publicly provided
education is very severe and hard to overcome. The state of education in
the country is far from enviable. We have not been able to make any
significant progress in achieving educational equality between regions
and genders. There is also evidence to suggest that some misallocation
of resources across various levels of education is taking place. Need
for rethinking our approach toward providing and financing education is
evident.
1. INTRODUCTION
Pakistan appeared on the map of the earth on August 14, 1947 as the
British left the Indian subcontinent. The World Bank (1992) classifies
Pakistan as a low income country on the basis of its per capita GNP. It
is the ninth most populous and perhaps one of the fastest growing
nations of the world.
Unfortunately, Pakistan has also been one of the most illiterate countries of the world. Statistics collected four years after
independence show that 86 percent people at that time could not read or
write in any language. Taking note of this disturbing situation, almost
all the relevant government documents ranging from the reports of
various commissions formed to reform education to policy documents like
five year plans emphasise eradication of mass illiteracy and provision
of universal primary education as an objective of public policy. Free
education for all has been traditionally advocated as a policy which
would sooner or later achieve these goals. This policy has also been
considered desirable from the view point of equity and social justice.
At the time of independence, almost all the schools in the rural
areas were public schools which charged only nominal tuition. In the
urban areas a few private schools usually run by religious or community
organisations could also be found. In October 1972, all the private
schools were nationalised and education up to tenth grade was made free.
Opening of private schools was again allowed in 1979. With this began an
era of expensive private schools, particularly in the urban areas,
existing side by side with low quality free public schools.
Free schooling financed by government funding dominated our
educational scene till the decade of 80s. The purpose of this article is
to critically evaluate the performance of this institutional
arrangement, and to see where did we stand at the end of this period. In
the next section we look at the severity and future prognosis of the
resource constraint which is one of the major causes of the decline of
our government owned school system. Section 3 examines the state of
education in which we find our country after several decades of emphasis
on free provision of schooling by the government. Implications of this
policy for educational equality and efficient resource allocation are
the focus of Sections 4 and 5 respectively. The final section presents
some concluding remarks.
2. FREE EDUCATION WITH RESOURCE CONSTRAINT
Providing free education to such a large population as
Pakistan's is a formidable task. This task has been made even more
difficult by the limited availability of public resources. Table 1 gives
federal government's expenditure on defence, debt servicing,
general administration, and social services at constant prices of
1980-81 as well as percentage share of these categories of expenditure
in the total current expenditure for the period from 1981-82 to 1989-90.
A quick glance through these figures reveals that defence and debt
servicing constitute more than 60 percent of total expenditure and the
expenditure on all the social services combined is close to a meagre three and a half percent. For the purpose of comparison, Table 2
presents share of defence, all social services combined, and education
in total central government expenditure of some countries of the region.
According to these figures, India and Pakistan's percentage of
defence expenditure is the highest in the region while their percentage
of expenditure on the social services is the lowest. Pakistan's
consolidated federal and provincial government spending on education
during the 80s presents a much better picture in terms of both level and
as percentage of GNP (See Table 3). Nonetheless, it falls short of the
UNESCO recommended minimum expenditure on education which is 4 percent
of the GNP for developing countries.
Any substantial increase in public spending on education is
difficult to achieve and sustain. (1) The efforts to increase
expenditure on education by shifting resources from the two major heads
of federal government expenditure, namely defence and debt servicing,
are unlikely to succeed in the short run due to various domestic,
external, and geo-political circumstances. Various drives to increase
government revenues have also been unsuccessful in the past. Studies of
tax shifting in Pakistan [see e.g. Irfan (1974); Naqvi (1975) and Jeetun
(1978)] suggest that a substantial part of the indirect taxes, which
constitute more than 80 percent of the total tax revenues, is shifted
forward to the consumers. Given low per capita income and mass poverty,
this burden cannot be increased any further without adverse political
implications.
The efforts to expand the base of direct taxes by including income
from agriculture in it have been successfully blocked in the past by the
powerful agriculturist lobby. The option of increasing budget deficit to
finance education does not appear to be feasible either. Pakistan's
budget deficit is already very high and the government is constantly
under pressure from international donor agencies like IMF and the World
Bank to reduce it. Running a huge budget deficit on a regular basis is
not a sound policy because of its adverse implications for the economy
including high rates of inflation and increasing public debt.
3. STATE OF EDUCATION IN PAKISTAN
A manifestation of the shortage of resources for education can be
seen in the gap between targets and actual achievements of various
education related goals during five year plans. Ahmed (1988), has
studied discrepancies and inconsistencies between sixth five year plan
targets and government policies. He points out that the downward
revision of the expenditure targets of a typical five year plan for the
education sector begins as soon as the implementation of the plan
starts. No surprise that the plan targets are almost never achieved.
Table 4 below offers a comparison between the enrolment targets for
primary and secondary schools set by the planners during various five
year plans and the enrolment ratios which were actually achieved. It is
evident from these figures that the advances on this front are far from
a success story. Not only the gap between the targets and the
achievement has been very wide, the attained enrolment rates are
themselves very low. This fact becomes clearer when we compare Pakistani
figures with those for other countries in Table 5. The persistent
difference between the enrolment rates of boys and girls is also
something to worry about. A significant shortfall in five year plan
targets of building new primary and secondary schools has also been
reported [See Khan et al. (1986)].
A more dramatic view of the resource constraint on education can be
had by looking at per pupil expenditure. Despite very low enrolment
rates, the available resources are thinly distributed over the enrolled
students. According to the figures in Table 6, on the average Pakistan
spent only 28.84 dollars on a primary school student in 1985 as compared
to India's 29.52 dollars. Per pupil expenditure on secondary
education was higher in absolute terms but still much less than Sri
Lanka's 109.89 dollars per student.
Chronic shortage of public funds coupled with insistence on free
education for all is one of the main causes of Pakistan's
relatively little progress in this area. Long after independence,
Pakistan is still lagging far behind other countries of the region in
the field of education. Table 7 presents literacy rates for Pakistan as
recorded during various censuses while Table 8 reports literacy rates
for some other countries of the region. Although literacy in Pakistan
has shown some increase over the decades, the progress in this area can
be termed modest at best when compared to the objective of universal
literacy. Pakistan's literacy rate is lower than that in
Bangladesh, India and Sri Lanka and is far from close to hundred percent
literacy in the industrialised countries. Given low enrolment rates at
the primary level (Table 4), no immediate improvement in this situation
can be expected in the short run. A grimmer picture emerges when we
consider the fact that a high percentage of students drops out of
primary school between grade I and grade II [Khan et al. (1987)].
Two unconventional programmes called Iqra and Nai Roshni were
introduced during the sixth five year plan to increase literacy and
primary education in the country. The Iqra Pilot Project was started in
two districts, Rawalpindi and Islamabad. Volunteer teachers were
required to teach reading and writing skills to adult illiterate
students at a mutually agreed time and location. Books for this scheme
Were provided by the government at a nominal price and the teacher was
offered an honorarium of Rs 1,000 per successful student. This project
turned out to be a failure because of inability to detect false claims
for honorarium money and shortage of resources.
The Nai Roshni programme was introduced on a nation wide basis. It
was meant to provide an opportunity to those boys and girls who were 10
to 14 years old and had to leave school without completing primary
education. The schools for these students operated in the buildings of
the existing government schools after regular school hours. No fee was
charged from the students and books were provided free of cost by the
government. This scheme also failed to provide the desired results and
the authors of the seventh five year plan had to learn following lesson
from this experiment:
"The sixth plan experience has shown that a short cut to
literacy is not only expensive but is hard to monitor. There is no
substitute for formal education" [Pakistan (1988), p. 252].
Availability of teachers is considered to be an important indicator
of educational facilities available to the students of a country.
Pupils-teacher ratio is a reasonable proxy for it: the larger this
ratio, the smaller the availability of teachers to the students.
Pupil-teacher ratios in Pakistan as given in Table 9 are quite high for
primary level, and have shown no significant drop. (Comparable figures
of pupils per teacher for other countries are reported in Table 10.)
4. FREE EDUCATION AND EDUCATIONAL INEQUALITY
Free education does not automatically lead to reduced educational
inequality. The reason is that free provision and free consumption of a
publicly produced good are not always the same thing. There is no
guarantee that everyone who desires to benefit from a free public
amenity like education will be able to do so. Many students are unable
to enrol in a school or to continue their studies till completion of a
particular level of education. The most common reason for this in the
developing countries is not the monetary cost of education, which in
most of the cases is negligible. It is the opportunity cost that
constitutes a huge part of the total costs of education and is most
likely to affect the decision to attend a school.
This is particularly true for the rural areas where schools are
often far away from the home village of the student and colleges and
universities are usually exclusively located in towns and big cities. In
addition, the school age children are required to contribute to the
household resources by doing either paid work or by participating in
home production activities. Girls are usually expected to help their
mothers in daily household chores. Presence of substantial unutilised
capacity in the rural area schools in Pakistan [Khan et al. (1986a) and
Mahmood and Zahid (1992)] lends support to this view.
Despite a long history of free public education, Pakistan still has
to face a high degree of educational inequality. This inequality
persists both across regions and gender. Though females constitute
almost half the population of the country, they lag far behind males
both in terms of enrolment rates and literacy rates (Tables 4 and 7).
Table I 1 shows a two-way classification by gender and region of the
literacy rates calculated from 1972 and 1981 census data. The figures in
this table show that the rural areas where almost 70 percent population
of the country lives, have far smaller literacy rate than the urban
areas. To further aggravate this situation, the extent of male-female
inequality in literacy is much higher in rural areas. In fact more than
90 percent of the females living in the rural areas were illiterate
according to 1981 census.
Those lucky few who are able to enrol in a school against such
heavy odds still face a high probability of being dropped out,
particularly in the early years of the primary school. Drop-out rates of
various grades and levels are higher for the rural areas and girls [Khan
et al. (1987)]. On the other hand, continuation rates, defined as the
ratio of enrolments in the final grade of a level of education to the
enrolment in the first grade of the same level as many years earlier as
the number of grades in that particular level, are generally lower for
girls and rural areas. This can be verified from the figures presented
in Table 12. According to these figures, the continuation rate for the
girls in the primary schools of the rural areas was only 28.1 percent
during 1980-1985. In other words, out of all the female students who
enrolled in the first grade in 1980-81, only a little more than one
fourth were able to reach the final grade of the primary school in the
specified time.
The representation of females among students and the teaching staff
is quite inadequate both at primary and secondary levels of education.
Percentage of female students and teachers reported in Table 13 is a
testimony to this fact. Improvement in this situation has been almost
negligible up till the 80s. For the purpose of comparison, Table 14
provides same indicators for some other countries as well. In case of
Pakistan, percentages of female schools at primary and secondary level
are also reported in Table 13 for different years, because up to this
level male and female educational institutions are separate in most of
the cases. These figures show that only about a quarter of the schools
are meant for female students.
Another aspect of educational inequality is the inequality across
various socioeconomic groups. In the developing countries, students from
higher income groups are generally over-represented in the education
system. Because of the paucity of data on income for developing
countries, Mingat and Tan (1986) studied distribution of various
education related variables among various professions in different
regions of the world. Professions are a good proxy of income in the
developing countries. Assuming that white collar workers earn more than
the manual labourers who in turn earn more than farmers, they found out,
in addition to other things, that in Asia, the poorest socioeconomic
groups had the lowest share of enrolment in educational institutions
relative to their share in population. Moreover, as we go to higher
levels of education, the representation of these groups steadily
declines. Khan and Siddiqui (1984) confirm severe under-representation
of the individuals belonging to the lowest socio-economic group among
the graduates of higher education in Pakistan.
Table 15 displays consolidated provincial and federal per pupil
expenditures in Pakistan by levels of education. These figures are
persistently higher for higher levels of education throughout the 80s.
Moreover, according to Khan et al. (1986), 75 percent of the money spent
by the government of Pakistan on scholarships goes to the institutions
of higher education. When we put together these figures with the facts
discussed in the above paragraph, it becomes apparent that the policy of
free public education is more likely to aggravate educational inequality
rather than alleviating it. As government spends more money per student
at the higher levels of education, the students from higher
socioeconomic groups, who are better represented at these levels of
education, are likely to benefit more from public exchequer.
Mass illiteracy and pattern of drop-out rates across various levels
of education adds one more dimension to the inequitable distribution of
educational subsidies. A vast majority of people who never go to school,
receive nothing from these subsidies. According to Khan et al. (1987), a
significant percentage of students who enrol at the primary school,
drops out between first and second grade. (2) This process continues at
the higher levels of education. Hence a small minority who makes it to
the highest rung of the educational ladder, ends up accumulating most of
the public subsidies for education. The Lorenz curves drawn by Jimenez
and Tan (1985) show that the cumulative public educational subsidies in
Pakistan are less equitably distributed than in an average developing
country. This distribution is slightly more equitable even in African
countries.
The method of financing public expenditures on education also does
not seem to be in conformity with equity considerations. These
expenditures are normally financed by the general tax revenues. As can
be inferred from Table 16, most of the tax revenues of the government of
Pakistan come from indirect taxes. Direct taxes, which are generally
progressive, constitute less than 20 percent of the total tax revenues
most of the time. Malik and Saqib (1985,1989) have studied incidence
pattern of federal taxes across various income groups in Pakistan's
rural and urban areas. Their main findings are that indirect taxes are
generally regressive for both rural and urban areas of the country. The
overall tax system is also regressive for the rural areas of Pakistan
while it is slightly progressive for the urban areas. Hence the poor
households in the rural areas end up paying more for education in terms
of taxes needed to finance free public schools. This situation adds to
the high level of inequity which already exists both between rural and
urban areas and within rural areas.
5. FREE EDUCATION AND ALLOCATIVE EFFICIENCY
To asses the allocative efficiency of the policy of nominal and
more or less flat rates of tuition fees for all levels and all students,
we need to refer to the studies of rates of returns to education for
Pakistan. Published work on this topic has been done by Hamdani (1977);
Haque (1977); Guisinger et al. ( 1984); Khan and Irfan (1985);
Psacharopoulos (1985); Jimenez and Tan (1985) and Pasha and Wasti
(1989). These studies widely differ in terms of data, methodology and
findings. The estimates of the rate of return to education obtained by
different authors are also markedly different from one another. While it
is reasonable to expect different figures for the rates of return to
emerge from data sets which differ in terms of time, geographical region
and the population covered, in case of Pakistan, same data set leads
different authors to entirely different results. This highlights the
sensitivity of these estimates to the methodology used for obtaining
them, and hence the need for interpreting them with care.
Despite such vast differences in the magnitude and pattern of
various estimates of the rates of return to education, it is still
possible to make some broad generalisations. One thing is clear about
these estimates. They show a mixed pattern across various levels of
education rather than conforming to the "... well-documented
declining rate of return pattern by level of education" which is
found to be particularly common in the developing countries. The returns
to education in Pakistan are also generally lower than those in other
developing countries [See Psacharopoulos (1973, 1981, 1985)]. However,
most of the studies report a high rate of returns for primary education.
Also the mixed pattern of the rate of returns to education contrasts
with the per-pupil government expenditure in Pakistan (Table 15) which
sharply increases with the level of education. These two facts about the
rate of return to education indicate a need for reallocation of
resources, especially towards primary education.
The findings of these studies are not particularly supportive of
the system of free public education. Since cost of educating a person
generally rises with the level of education, by charging zero or same
small tuition fee from all students government ends up spending more
money per student for higher levels. Since rate of return does not
necessarily increase with the level of education, some misallocation of
resources Occurs.
The studies of the rate of returns to education are not the only
type of research that points to some possible misallocation of resources
across levels in the education sector of Pakistan. Cohen (1985) used a
Labour Force Matrix to project manpower imbalances which would emerge at
the end of the sixth five year plan, in 1988. His main prediction was a
surplus of labour force participants with higher education and a
shortage of those with primary education. This lead him to conclude that
the labour market for lower skills and education would continue to be
tighter than that for higher skills and education. A study by the
Manpower Division of the Government of Pakistan [Pakistan (1985)] which
uses similar methodology, brings home essentially the same message: a
need for reallocation of resources towards primary education.
6. SOME CONCLUDING REMARKS
There is broad agreement among economists and other social
scientists that education plays a crucial role in the economic
development of a country. (3) This view has been further strengthen by
some recent research on endogenous growth which has found both
theoretical support and empirical evidence in favour of a positive
relationship between economic growth and human capital formation. (4)
In the Context of Pakistan, a number of studies have been done to
assess the extent and nature of the relationship between education and a
large variety of other variables. Butt (1984) has found that five or
more years of farmer's education lead to increased farm and labour
productivity, reduced use of farm labour, and increased use of yield
augmenting inputs like fertiliser. Azhar's (1988) finding that
farmer's education results in a significant increase in the farm
output by increasing technical efficiency lends further support to the
belief that expansion of education in rural areas would help in the
development of the agricultural sector. Various causality tests
conducted by Khan et al. (1991) conclude that literacy Granger-causes
productivity in the manufacturing sector. A study of gender wage
differential by Ashraf and Ashraf (1993) reveals that a significant
percentage of the wage gap between males and females can be explained by
the difference in their characteristics including education. The studies
of the rates of return to education referred to above give a positive
value for the rates of returns to all the levels of education. This
means that by investing in education one can increase ones life time
earnings.
The influence of education is not limited to the economic domain
alone. Association between education and various social and demographic
aspects of Pakistani life is also well documented. Khan and Sirageldin
(1979) have studied fertility behaviour in Pakistan. They discover that
wife's education has a negative effect on completed family size in
the rural areas. Husband's education also exerts a negative
influence on the completed family size in the rural areas and demand for
additional children in urban areas. Sathar (1984) also reports that
women with more than primary education have notably lower fertility. She
further reports that educated women also marry late, desire and bear
fewer children, loose less children through death at earlier ages, and
use contraceptives more often than uneducated women.
Given the overwhelming evidence in support of the benefits of
education to the economy and the society, the sorry state of affairs in
the educational sector of Pakistan cannot be taken lightly. The problems
of mass illiteracy, educational inequality, and inefficiency need to be
solved as soon as possible. It seems obvious that the policy of free
education through public schools, which has been in effect for decades,
has not gone a long way in this direction. This makes a new, carefully
targeted approach towards providing and financing education inevitable.
Comments
The issue author has taken up is the most crucial factor
determining the performance of any development strategy, regardless of
space and time. It becomes even more crucial in the context of countries
like Pakistan who have never effectively addressed the serious problems
in dealing with the inadequacies of their public schooling system.
Author's approach to the problem appears to be multidimensional and
quite a good amount of effort has been invested in this work.
What are the major findings of this study and what significance do
they hold for policy-making to improve the situation of public schooling
in Pakistan? A close read of the paper suggests following improvements
regarding consistent articulation of the arguments.
1. First and foremost, there was supposed to be a dominant MORAL of
such kind of work derived simultaneously from two mutually reinforcing
focuses, politics and economics. The author should have included the
political dimension with categorical position that if Pakistan is to
develop a sustainable democratic culture and tradition, her politicians
must do some serious heart searching regarding one of the most
fundamental democratic rights of their electorate, universal literacy
through the adequate provision of free public schooling. As far
economics, the bureaucrats and technocrats of Pakistan ought to have
been strongly advised to carefully and pragmatically weigh the long run
opportunity cost of different alternatives while allocating tax payers
money, most of it sweat drenched. But, on the contrary, author's
fairly detailed extrapolation of government expenditure in Pakistan
appears to be an apologetic interpretation of the socially decadent and
economically unsustainable status quo. The reader scarcely finds
anything critical or suggestive regarding the reshuffling of government
expenditures to provide adequately for free public schooling. Every
student of economics appreciates the resource constraint. That said, the
claims on scarce resources are never divine and must be settled against
the consideration of the sustenance of civil society. Adequate
provisions for free public schooling ought to be listed amongst top
priorities of a nation because, rights of the individual apart, school
is an interface between the family and civil society, between the
private and public spheres. No doubt the payoffs of such a strategy are
in the long run. But what needs to be followed is the story of the man
asking his gardener how long it would take for a certain seed to grow
into a tree. The gardener replied it would take 100 years. To which the
man's decisive response was, "Then plant the seed this
morning. There is no time to loose".
2. Given that in recent years each successive government in
Pakistan appears to be fanatically implementing the liberal policy
advise of Bretton Woods Institutions (BWIs), the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, in almost all spheres of economy, author
ought to have vociferously advised the state authorities for paying some
heed to the recommendations of liberal philosophers in the realm of
education too. The Scot intellectuals Adam Smith, James Mill, Thomas
Macaulay, Thomas Malthus, W. T. Thornton, and John Stuart Mill were
responsible for developing the case for state intervention in education.
Adam Smith, the prophet of BWIs market theology, was the first to
present systematically the case for state responsibility for compulsory
education of all the citizen. (1) It must not be forgotten that since
the 19th century, and in some countries earlier, the major driving force
for popular education was the intervention by the state to provide free
tax-supported schools and to enforce legislation compelling parents to
send their children to them. In 1524 Martin Luther sent a letter to
German municipalities insisting it was their duty to provide schools,
and the duty of the parents to educate their children. (2) Author, on
the contrary, is suggesting that "providing free education to such
a large population as Pakistan's is a formidable".
3. Author's conclusion that the policy of free education
through public schools has not gone a long way to solve the problem of
mass literacy overlooks the major factor responsible for this failure:
the inadequate legislative structure for school education. In 1918 the
British authorities introduced in India the laws regarding compulsory
education, but these laws were only enabling legislation, modelled after
an 1871 act of the British Parliament, superseded a decade later by a
parliamentary act requiring local authorities to make education
compulsory. The latter legislation was never introduced by the British
in India. These laws remain in force today in Pakistan. It should be
noted that all these laws permit but do not require local authorities to
make education compulsory. (3)
4. Author has mentioned the opportunity cost being most likely to
affect the parents' decision to let their children attend the
school. But dismal record of achievements on literacy front warrants
that state in Pakistan introduces the principal of compulsory education.
Children could continue to help at home, work in fields, even be
employed in factories, but for part of the day they must attend school.
Further, opportunity cost is not the only consideration influencing poor
parents' decision of their children's formal education.
Provisions, both physical and, most importantly, in terms of educational
quality, are so hopeless in many of the public schools that parents
rightly consider it a waste of time. In many cases, poor people living
in shanty towns and city peripheries are compelled to send their
children to private schools because of poorly performing and, in some
situations, even non-performing public schools. Indeed, the suggestion
that people at the lower end of social strata are generally reluctant
for educating their children, particularly girls, is fraught with
serious errors and omissions.
5. Almost every other study on formal education in Pakistan blows
the issue of gender discrimination out of proportion. It might have been
justified, even warranted, in the past. Presently, girls enrolled at
most institutions of higher learning in Pakistan are outnumbering boys
by alarming margins. Gender inequality at school level, which author
emphasises on the basis of, at least, six years old information, may
still exist in some rural areas. But extrapolation of composite figures
listed in Pakistan Economic Survey for 1997-98 tells a quite different
story: in six years to 1996, percentage increase in male:female primary
and middle schools was 3:9 and 32:30 respectively; the percentage
increase in enrolment at these levels was 52:43 and 27:32 respectively;
increase in girls' enrolment in high schools was also more than
that of boys, 41 percent and 40 percent respectively. These estimates do
not endorse author's unverified (4) discriminatory drop out rates
'thesis'. (5)
6. In Pakistan, asymmetry of tax burden and benefits is quite
significant for all type of public expenditures. Although author has
rightly made
the point regarding the 'statutory' tax structure of
Pakistan, its insertion per se appears to be lopsided: composite
expenditure on education constitute, unfortunately, only a small part of
the total and author's main focus is supposed to be public
schooling rather than education as a whole. Further, given that mostly
children of the poor go to public schools, especially after the
reintroduction of private sector in schooling, and in rural areas only
public schooling is provided, the findings of Lorenz curves by Jimenez
and Tan may not hold out if subsidies for school education are
considered separately.
7. Allocative efficiency is the central problem confronting
alternative public policy choices. Although author has included this
important dimension in his work, it is not possible to ascertain
anything out of the information provided: four of the seven studies
quoted by author have only reported private rate of return to education,
and findings of three studies reporting social rate of return are not
mutually consistent.
8. This work reports some comparisons with other developing
countries, but their significance is not clear. Nowhere the question is
addressed that what forces have propelled a higher commitment to public
schooling in many other developing countries? Are they the same or
similar to those that affected the developed countries?
And in what way do they differ from the forces at work, or not at
work, in Pakistan. Finally, author has scarcely given us any of his own
finding. In its present form, this work could at best be rated a
research report based on literature survey.
(1) See Adam Smith The Wealth of Nations. New York: modern Library,
1937.
(2) See Graft Harvey (ed.) Literacy and Social Development in the
West: A Reader. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981.
(3) The existing law relating to primary education in Pakistan has
been consolidated under the Provincial Primary Education Ordinance,
1962. This Ordinance gives the provincial government the power to
introduce compulsory primary education in any district. In such an area,
the parent of a child is to enrol the child in a recognised school until
the child has completed eight years of schooling. But this is only an
enabling legislation, and does not imply compulsory primary education as
a social obligation of state. In brief, the provincial government can,
but do not have to, introduce compulsory primary education. See Article
37(b), Section 18, The Constitution.
(4) Author's argument is based on quoting continuation rates
from a study by Mahmood and Zahid which utilises early 1980s data.
(5) The argument does not imply, however, that gender
discrimination in education is no longer a serious issue to be
considered for development strategy of Pakistan. The point is that, for
meaningful results, emphasis must be micro and area specific.
Naheed Zia Khan
Department of Economics, Islamia University, Bahawalpur.
Author's Note: I am grateful to Dr Zafar Mahmood and Dr Fazal
Husain, respectively Chief of Research and Research Economist at PIDE,
for their comments on an earlier draft of this paper. The usual caveat
applies.
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(1) Against all odds, the government has managed to significantly
increase spending on social services including education under its
Social Action Program. However, serious doubts have been expressed about
the sustainability of this programme [see Pasha (1997)].
(2) This percentage varies from 17.6 to 55.4 depending upon
province, region and gender of the students.
(3) A review of the evidence related to the impact of primary
schooling on economic development can be found in Colclough (1982).
(4) For Pakistan, empirical evidence on forgone growth due to
underinvestment in education can be found in Birdsall etal. (1993).
Najam us Saqib is Senior Research Economist at the Pakistan
Institute of Development Economics, Islamabad.
Table 1
Pakistan's Federal Government Current Expenditure on Defence, Debt
Servicing, General Administration, and Social Services at Market
Prices of 1980-81, and as Percent of Total Expenditure
Fiscal Total Debt General Social
Year Expenditure Defence Servicing Administration Services
1981-82 53,513 18,155 12,841 2,009 1,458
(33.93) (24.00) (3.75) (2.72)
1982-83 58,726 20,170 16,835 2,196 1,664
(34.35) (28.66) (3.74) (2.83)
1983-84 61,585 21,743 18,020 3,226 1,866
(35.30) (29.26) (5.24) (3.03)
1984-85 75,187 24,145 19,000 3,123 1,899
(35.38) (27.84) (4.58) (2.78)
1985-86 73,389 24;653 21,847 3,399 2,188
(33.59) (29.77) (4.63) (2.98)
1986-87 78,504 29,010 24,548 5,006 2,893
(36.95) (31.27) (6.37) (3.69)
1987-88 87,171 30,101 27,946 3,264 3,136
(34.53) (32.06) (3.74) (3.60)
1988-89 92,232 30,108 32,531 3,340 3,033
(32.65) (35.27) (3.62) (3.29)
1989-90 95,936 32,518 36,077 3,824 2,825
(33.90) (37.61) (3.78) (2.95)
Source: Calculations based on Pakistan (1990, 1993).
Note: Figures in parentheses are percentages.
Table 2
Percentage Share of Defence, Social Services, and Education
in Total Central Government Expenditure of Selected Countries
in 1990
Name of Social
Country Defence Services (a) Education
Bangladesh 10.1 16.0 11.2
India 17.0 4.1 2.5
Nepal 6.0 15.7 10.9
Sri Lanka 7.4 15.3 9.9
Source: World Bank (1992).
(a) Health and education combined.
Table 3
Pakistan's Consolidated Federal and Provincial Government
Expenditure on Education at Market Prices of 1980-81
Total Expenditure Expenditure on Education
Expenditure on Education
Fiscal (Million (Million % of Total
Year Rupees) Rupees) Expenditure % of GNP
1981-82 69,197 5,459 7.98 1.60
1982-83 75,665 5,619 7.43 1.60
1983-84 81,139 6,120 7.54 1.64
1984-85 88,513 7,747 8.75 2.0
1985-86 98,639 9,276 9.40 2.27
1986-87 106,960 10,752 10.05 2.52
1987-88 115,484 13,048 11.29 2.89
1988-89 118,620 15,048 12.69 3.19
1989-90 122,768 17,774 14.48 3.59
Source: Calculations based on Pakistan (1993).
Table 4
Target and Actual Enrolment Rates for Pakistan's Various
Five-Year Plans
(Percentages)
Fifth Plan Sixth Plan Seventh Plan
(1978-1983) (1983-88) (1988-93)
Target Actual Target Actual Target Actual
Gender (1989-90)
Primary
Both 68.0 44.4 75.0 48.6 80.6 49.3
Boys 90.0 60.0 90.0 63.0 89.0 64.1
Girls 45.0 30.0 60.0 33.5 70.0 33.8
Secondary
Both 26.0 18.0 28.0 20.0 33.5 21.0
Boys 35.0 24.0 35.0 27.0 43.1 29.0
Girls 13.0 9.9 16.0 12.0 22.8 12.3
Source: Mahmood and Zahid (1992).
Table 5
Enrolment Rates by Level and Sex for Selected Countries in 1989
(Percentages)
Primary Secondary
Name of Both Both
Country Sexes Males Females Sexes Males Females
Bangladesh 70 76 64 17 23 11
India 98 112 82 43 53 31
Nepal (a) 86 112 84 30 42 17
Source: UNESCO (1992).
Note: The figures reported in this table are the ratios of the
total enrolled students to the school age population multiplied
by hundred. Since all enrolled students are considered for these
calculations irrespective of their age, some figures are greater
than hundred.
(a) Figures for Nepal are for the year 1988.
Table 6
Expenditure Per Pupil for Selected Countries in 1985 (U.S. $)
Level of Education
Name of Country Primary Secondary
Bangladesh 15.19 31.55
India 29.52 39.40
Nepal 14.84 30.17
Pakistan 28.84 69.72
Sri Lanka (a) N.A. 109.89
Source: Calculations based on UNESCO (1992).
(a) Figures for Sri Lanka are for the year 1986.
N.A. = Not available.
Table 7
Literacy Rates by Sex in Pakistan
(Percentages)
Census Year Both Sexes Males Females
1951 13.2 17.0 8.6
1961 18.4 26.9 8.2
1972 21.7 30.2 11.6
1981 26.2 35.0 16.0
1993 (a) 35.0 47.3 22.3
Source: Pakistan (1987).
Note: These figures are in accordance with the definition of
literacy which was adopted in 1972 census. According to this
definition, a literate person is one "who is able to read and
write in some language with understanding".
(a) Census in Pakistan is conducted after every 10 years. The
census scheduled for 1991 was delayed till 1998 for various
political and administrative reasons and its results are not yet
available. The figures for 1993 reported above are estimates of
the Planning and Development Division of the Government of Pakistan
[see Pakistan (1993)], and are likely to have an upward bias.
Table 8
Literacy Rates for Some Selected Countries in 1981
(Percentages)
Name of Country Both Sexes Males Females
Bangladesh 29.1 39.1 18.0
India 40.8 54.8 25.7
Nepal 20.6 31.7 9.2
Sri Lanka 86.8 91.3 82.0
Source: UNESCO (1992).
Table 9
Pupils Per Teacher in Pakistan's Primary and Secondary Schools
Year Primary Schools Secondary Schools
1981-82 36 17
1982-83 37 17
1983-84 39 17
1984-85 38 18
1985-86 39 18
1986-87 40 18
1987-88 40 17
1988-89 37 16
1989-90 37 16
Source: Calculated from Pakistan 0993).
Table 10
Pupils Per Teacher in Primary and Secondary Schools
of Selected Countries in 1988
Name of Country Primary Schools Secondary Schools
Bangladesh 58 27
India 45 22
Nepal 37 29
Sri Lanka (1987) 14 N.A.
Source: UNESCO (1992).
Table 11
Literacy Rates in Pakistan by Sex and Rural/Urban Area
(Percentages)
Region and Census Year Both Sexes Males Females
All Pakistan
1972 21.7 30.2 11.6
1981 26.2 35.0 16.0
1993 (a) 35.0 47.3 22.3
Rural Areas
1972 14.3 22.6 4.7
1981 17.3 26.2 7.3
1993 26.7 N.A N.A
Urban Areas
1972 41.5 49.9 30.9
1981 47.1 55.3 37.3
1993 56.0 N.A N.A
Source: Pakistan (1993).
N.A = Not available.
(a) For 1993 figures, see note a, table 7.
Table 12
Continuation Rates by Rural/Urban Area and Sex in Pakistan's Primary
and Secondary Schools
(Percentages)
Primary Secondary
Urban Rural Urban Rural
Time Period Boys Girls Boys Girls Boys Girls Boys Girls
1975-76
to 64.8 54.0 55.3 29.3 69.0 61.6 29.3 13.0
1979-80
1980-81
to 62.3 49.7 42.3 28.1 75.6 58.1 34.6 18.1
1984-85
Source: Mahmood and Zahid (1992).
Table 13
Some Indicators of Females' Share in Pakistan's
Education by Levels
(Percentages)
Primary Schools
% Female % Female % Female
Year Students Teachers Schools
1981-82 35.0 31.2 32.7
1982-83 32.5 30.0 28.4
1983-84 31.7 32.2 28.5
1984-85 32.5 31.9 29.2
1985-86 33.3 31.7 29.1
1986-87 33.1 32.7 24.1
1987-88 33.6 32.8 23.5
1988-89 33.4 32.0 26.6
1989-90 32.1 30.1 27.1
Secondary Schools
% Female % Female % Female
Year Students Teachers Schools
1981-82 25.7 30.5 27.1
1982-83 25.6 30.1 29.2
1983-84 24.1 31.4 29.0
1984-85 24.7 30.5 28.5
1985-86 26.9 30.3 29.3
1986-87 27.1 30.8 29.9
1987-88 28.4 31.5 30.1
1988-89 29.5 31.2 31.7
1989-90 29.4 31.4 32.5
Source: Calculations based on data in Pakistan (1993).
Table 14
Some Indicators of Females' Share in Education by Levels
for Selected Countries in 1988
(Percentages)
Primary Schools Secondary Schools
% Female % Female % Female % Female
Name of Country Students Teachers Students Teachers
Bangladesh 44 18 31 10
India 40 28 35 32
Nepal 32 11 27 8
Sri Lanka 48 N.A. 51 N.A.
Source: UNESCO (1992).
N.A. = Not Available.
Table 15
Pakistan's Consolidated Federal and Provincial Government Expenditure
Per Pupil, by Level of Education at Market Prices of 1980-81
(Rupees)
Year Primary Secondary College University
1981-82 308 471 1,697 12,519
1982-83 294 526 1,876 11,817
1983-84 300 548 1,791 12,214
1984-85 363 734 2,100 13,132
1985-86 403 788 2,090 14,198
1986-87 445 792 2,560 19,392
1987-88 450 993 2,610 23,330
1988-89 436 1030 2,910 28,971
1989-90 446 1142 2,911 36,789
Source: Calculations based on Pakistan (1990, 1993).
Table 16
Pakistan's Federal Government Revenues from Direct Taxes and Their
Share in Total Tax Revenues and GDP
Direct Taxes as
Direct Taxes % of Total
Fiscal Year (Rs Million) Tax Revenues % of GDP
1981-82 8,882 20.6 2.9
1982-83 9,261 18.9 2.5
1983-84 9,197 17.1 2.2
1984-85 9,730 17.4 2.1
1985-86 10,267 16.3 2.0
1986.87 11,105 13.3 1.9
1987-88 12,441 15.0 1.8
1988-89 14,586 13.2 1.9
1989-90 15.741 13.2 1.8
Source: Pakistan (1993).
(2) This percentage varies from 17.6 to 55.4 depending
upon province, region and gender of the students.