Abstract

This study investigates relative efficiency of public education and health sector in selected middle income countries with special reference to Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The study uses data for two reference years; 2000 (implementation year of MDGs for developing countries) and 2015 (the final year of MDGs). Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) and Malmquist Productivity Index (MPI) are used to calculate relative efficiency, operating scale of the countries (DMUs) and productivity change in relative efficiency over time respectively. The paper conceptualizes relative efficiency of the countries in discretionary, multicriteria input-output variables context to investigate efficiency differences among the countries and deduce important takeaways. Educational expenditure, teachers at primary level, health expenditure, birth attended by skilled staff are used as input variables while enrollment at primary level, completion of primary level education, infant survival per annum and child survival per annum are used as output variables. The DEA results show that all countries could not operate at efficient level to target MDGs. The level of efficiency was not same under different DEA specifications in both the periods. Some countries were inefficient because of their size; either having too large size or too small size of operation. The sources of change in efficiency over the time were either because of real change in efficiency or change in technology frontier or both. The study identified a set of institutional and individuals factors which contribute to the efficiency and inefficiency of DMUs under investigation.

Highlights

  • KeywordsEfficiency, Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA), Public Education, Health, Malmquist Productivity Index (MPI)JEL ClassificationC14 H51 H52 I18 I21 I28Scarcity of resources is supposed to be the main economic problem faced by all economic agents while making various economic choices4

  • This study examined the relative efficiency in public education and health sector in selected middle income countries regarding Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) targets for two different time periods; 2000 and 2015

  • Educational expenditure, teachers at primary level, heath expenditure, birth attended by skilled staff are used as inputs; enrollment at primary level, survival at primary level, Infant and child survival per annum are used as outputs

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Summary

Introduction

KeywordsEfficiency, Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA), Public Education, Health, Malmquist Productivity Index (MPI)JEL ClassificationC14 H51 H52 I18 I21 I28Scarcity of resources is supposed to be the main economic problem faced by all economic agents while making various economic choices. Health and education are the basic needs as well as fundamental rights of every individual and considered main factors of Human Development (Ul-Haq, 1995). It is the responsibility of every government to provide basic education and health facility to their people. Government allocate sufficient amount of their revenue to the education and health sector. The percentage of expenditure allocated to these sectors varies across the countries. In developed countries the percentage expenditure allocated to these two sectors are comparatively high than developing countries. ; the education level, quality and health performance indicators of developing countries are mostly unsatisfactory comparatively

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