dc.date.accessioned | 2021-03-31T05:16:13Z | |
dc.date.available | 2021-03-31T05:16:13Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2007 | |
dc.identifier.uri | http://repository.kippra.or.ke/handle/123456789/2775 | |
dc.description.abstract | The study analyses the feasibility of Free Secondary Education (FSE) in
Kenya. Its purpose is to present an analysis on whether Kenya can afford
FSE and how such a programme can be financed without compromising
the gains being experienced in other sectors of the economy. The study used
both qualitative and quantitative analytical techniques to analyse secondary
data mainly from government sources. An Education Simulation Model
(EdSim) was used to arrive at educational outputs and costs of different
scenarios of FSE. The outputs from EdSim provided inputs for the KIPPRA
Treasury Macro Model (KTMM) in order to evaluate the macroeconomic
implication offi nancing FSE under different scenarios. Descriptive analysis
is used to complement the results from the two models. The study shows
that in the short run,financingfull FSE could have inflationary implications.
In addition, it would cause a financial squeeze of resources from other
equally deserving sub-sectors. The implications vary by the approach used
-that is, either a full FSE or a gradual implementation of FSE. However, as
the economy continues to experience good performance, it is possible to
introduce targeted subsidies in secondary education, starting with teaching
and learning materials and computers (and related accessories). The study
was not able to quantify the effects of FSE on other competing sub-sectors
such as health and social protection due to analytical limitations. The study
concludes that FSE is publicly affordable but at a moderate to high cost.
Introduction of FSE would trigger a series of more education reforms,
including changing the role of pre-secondary national examinations from
that of a selection tool to an instrument/or measuring pupils' competencies. | en |
dc.language.iso | en | en |
dc.publisher | The Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis | en |
dc.relation.ispartofseries | DP/75/2007; | |
dc.subject | School infrastructure | en |
dc.subject | Kenya | en |
dc.subject | Macroeconomic Implications | en |
dc.subject | Financing Sources | en |
dc.subject | Education Simulation Model | |
dc.title | Discussion Paper No. 75 of 2007 on Free Secondary Education in Kenya: Costs, Financing Sources and Implications | en |
dc.type | KIPPRA Publications | en |
ppr.contributor.author | Ngware, Moses; Onsomu, Eldah; Kiriga, Benson & Muthaka, David | |