Abstract

Policy discourses posit an accountability deficit as an underlying cause of a “learning crisis” in many low-income countries. Many studies understand this perceived deficit from a principal-agent perspective, arguing that incentives facing teachers and schools often do not align to the interests of parents and students. Such perspectives underlie many randomized controlled trials, which associate interventions with outcomes, but which also produce varying or inconsistent results across contexts. This paper seeks to study the accountability of schools and teachers more directly, looking at how it varies across public and private schools and how it relates to students’ literacy and numeracy abilities. We report results from a mixed methods study conducted in Mumbai and Kathmandu. Our results show that there are some relationships between accountability and learning outcomes, but these appear to be specific to the context. Quantitative data also show that differences between public and private models of schooling are negligible when students’ social backgrounds and school composition are considered. Qualitative data show that accountability processes create a significant burden on staff time and embed complex power dynamics that are not always productive. Taken together, these results problematize policies that seek to improve learning through “demand-side” approaches such as privatization. They show that the dynamics of accountability are a complex system, like the motion of a "double pendulum," and therefore simple conceptual approoaches such as the principal-agent model are of limited academic and practical utility.

Highlights

  • Policy discourses cite a global “learning crisis” (UNESCO, 2014; World Bank, 2018) in many low-income countries

  • Accountability through exit is higher in schools that charge fees, as parents have the option to change to another feecharging school or to the public sector

  • Voice follows a similar pattern, wide variation in public schools in Kathmandu shows that high levels of voice are possible within public schooling, which is substantiated below in qualitative data on the dynamics of School Management Committees (SMCs)

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Summary

Introduction

Policy discourses cite a global “learning crisis” (UNESCO, 2014; World Bank, 2018) in many low-income countries. The economics literature suggests that this “crisis” requires shifting policy focus from the supply side (i.e. inputs such as schools, teachers and books) to the demand side, by focusing on educational outcomes (Banerjee and Duflo, 2011; Glewwe and Muralidharan, 2016; Pritchett, 2013). Such policies would align teachers’ incentives with students’ learning outcomes through mechanisms such as performance-related pay, short-term contracts, or competition between schools (e.g. through private schooling). In migrating to urban centers, families look to education to secure a Variable

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