The Role of Intergovernmental Fiscal Transfers in Improving Education Outcomes

Page 265

Brazil Case Study | 229

The existing evidence indicates that the incentive mechanism and the ­provision of technical assistance, implemented simultaneously, have had a greater impact on learning than they would have had if adopted separately. An important aspect of Ceará’s education model is the complementary impact of its various policy pillars (incentives, technical assistance, learning monitoring, the decentralization of education provision, and strong political leadership) on learning. World Bank research strongly suggests that implementing the full package has a greater impact on learning than implementing one pillar alone (Lautharte, Oliveira, and Loureiro, 2020). Comparing schools at the border between Ceará and neighboring states, Lautharte, Oliveira, and Loureiro (2020) have shown that when the incentive model with technical assistance was introduced in schools in Ceará, it produced an impact two to three times greater than that when the same schools had only RBF in place. These results hold for the performance of primary and lower secondary students on both the Portuguese and mathematics SAEB tests.

CONCLUSION The experience of the Brazilian education finance framework shows that it is possible to substantially improve the regional equity of education spending. The main lessons from the Brazilian education finance system include: • Pooling resources from distinct governmental levels to redistribute them according to a per capita rule with a minimum level of spending per student is an effective and transparent way of reducing inequalities in education spending, especially in systems with high regional inequality at the baseline. • Applying higher weights for disadvantaged students when redistributing funds can foster a more equitable expansion of education provision and enrollment. • Strengthening information systems, increasing transparency, and allowing direct bank transfers are key to eliminating political bargaining over intergovernmental transfers in education. • Replacing the earmarking of revenues for education expenditures with an exogenous minimum level of education spending per student that is compatible with the amount of total resources allocated to the education sector can effectively increase efficiency and equity. The RBF mechanism implemented in the state of Ceará can teach us important lessons on how to substantially improve learning and other education outcomes by using resources rationally, especially in a context of fiscal constraint. The main lessons from the Ceará case are: • There is a high level of complementarity between financial incentives and technical assistance. Creating well-designed incentives aimed at improving education outcomes in the absence of technical support can still improve average education outcomes, but some municipalities can become discouraged and lag behind, thus undermining the overall benefits of the policy. Conversely, providing high-quality technical support without strong and attractive incentives for improvement can yield some gains, particularly in municipalities with limited capacity and poor education outcomes. However,


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Notes

2min
page 333

References

9min
pages 334-339

Key policy directions

2min
page 332

Fiscal transfer mechanisms

2min
page 312

education?

2min
page 311

10.2 Education expenditure in Shandong, 2018

7min
pages 307-309

9.1 Evolution of the allocation mechanism in school finance

2min
page 288

9.2 Improving education outcomes in Ceará, Brazil

5min
pages 296-297

Key policy directions to strengthen decentralized education financing

5min
pages 294-295

Introduction

2min
page 301

9.4 Pillars for central government education transfers to municipalities

4min
pages 284-285

governments

7min
pages 274-276

Conclusion

2min
page 265

References

3min
pages 268-270

Notes

7min
pages 266-267

8.2 Change in IDEB scores, 2005–17

1min
page 263

Impact of Brazil’s decentralized financing system on subnational spending and education outcomes

2min
page 258

in Ceará

4min
pages 253-254

8.10 Federal contributions to FUNDEB, 2007–17

2min
page 252

8.7 Brazil’s results on PISA, 2000–18

1min
page 245

8.1 Learning poverty in Brazilian municipalities, 2017

1min
page 244

8.1 Preuniversity education responsibilities of governments in Brazil

4min
pages 240-241

Introduction

4min
pages 237-238

References

1min
pages 235-236

7.9 Impact of total local expenditure on reading

2min
page 230

7.1 Distribution of education transfers as a zero-sum game

5min
pages 217-218

7.9 Subnational education spending by financing source, 2018

4min
pages 211-212

How is the system financed? Effects of decentralized financing system on subnational spending

2min
page 207

and 2018

2min
page 201

6.13 Transfers and education spending

1min
page 191

Context

1min
page 199

7.12 Allocation of education transfers, 2005–19

2min
page 215

6.15 Predicted education outcomes and district spending

1min
page 194

6.14 District spending and education outcomes

4min
pages 192-193

Introduction

1min
page 173

Fiscal transfer mechanisms

2min
page 183

References

12min
pages 168-172

Notes

9min
pages 165-167

Key policy directions to strengthen the decentralized education finance system

5min
pages 163-164

5.24 GERs in government primary schools, by LG, 2019/20

1min
page 155

and high primary GER and falling secondary GER, 1996/97–2019/20

1min
page 152

Effects of the decentralized finance system on subnational spending and education outcomes

4min
pages 150-151

Introduction

4min
pages 121-122

5.2 Government responsibilities under the Education Act

12min
pages 127-132

4.18 Fund flows in education

1min
page 109

for education

5min
pages 103-104

governments

2min
page 93

4.1 Population pyramid of Sudan, 2000–30

1min
page 90

4.9 Gender parity index, by state

2min
page 98

Notes

2min
page 82

Introduction

1min
page 89

References

10min
pages 83-88

Political economy constraints

2min
page 81

transfers for education

13min
pages 75-80

Education (FUNDEB

2min
page 66

Intergovernmental transfers

2min
page 48

3.3 Marginal effects of fiscal transfers on subnational education spending

5min
pages 61-62

3.3 The No Child Left Behind Act in the United States

5min
pages 72-73

outcomes?

5min
pages 70-71

Tax assignment

2min
page 47

Impact of fiscal transfers in education: A literature review

7min
pages 51-53
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.