Philippines Discussion Notes


Public resources allocated to education have been persistently low and declining as a share of total government budget and GDP



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Public resources allocated to education have been persistently low and declining as a share of total government budget and GDP (Table 1). Real government spending on education declined over the last ten years from over 4.2 percent of GDP in 1998 to 2.6 percent of GDP in 2008. Real government spending on basic education also declined every year from 2.9 percent in 2002 to about 2.3 percent of GDP in 2005. This also translates into a steady decline in real spending per student from 2000 to 2005. Despite the slight improvements in the fiscal circumstances, the share of national government spending on the education sector as a whole declined, with the share of basic education falling more sharply from 19.1 percent in 2002 to less than 15 percent in 2008. In addition, government spending on basic education has not kept pace with the rapidly growing school-age population which has put increasing pressure on the public budget. Actual spending stagnated also because of the government’s, especially the Department of Education’s (DepED), inability to spend the full amounts appropriated in the annual budgets. Recent case studies revealed slow and incomplete budget execution by the DepED due to operational inefficiencies and instability in the sector’s policy environment.

  • Low student learning achievement is likely to undermine economic growth and other benefits from additional years of schooling. They also erode the country’s early advantage in emerging industries. Evidence shows that contrary to previous observations, the availability of workers with competencies needed in emerging industries has been tightening, as reflected by the rise in the wage premium for those workers (Hanushek & Wobman, 2007; Di Gropello, 2009). Such tightening reflects the unresolved issues that affect not only basic education, but post-basic education as well.


    Recent Reforms


    1. In response to the challenges in basic education, the government commissioned a variety of studies, pilots, and reform plans. It introduced policy actions to mitigate input shortages (such as textbooks and school buildings), and has revised the basic education curriculum, teacher training, and instructional policies. Yet, these policy actions have not produced sustained and system-wide improvements in outcomes. Reform measures were often fragmented and isolated, and failed to strengthen performance accountability and incentives, or to build a strong constituency for change.




    1. In 2005, the government developed the Basic Education Sector Reform Agenda (BESRA), which is a sector-wide program that seeks to improve the quality of schools in a decentralized environment. The program is based on lessons from international research and draws from local experiences with successful pilots of school-based management (SBM), especially the Third Elementary Education Project (TEEP) and the Basic Education Assistance for Mindanao (BEAM) Project.




    1. Where the Philippines Could Be: Policy Options


    Table 3:

    Summary of Key Policy Areas and Actions

    Policy Area 1: Universal Primary Education and Increased Secondary Net Enrolment

    Action 1.1 Intensify support for affirmative action for the poor and marginalized groups

    Action 1.2 Provide complementary support for the CCT program

    Action 1.3 Expand the provision of private education services

    Action 1.4 Build schools and classrooms in areas with no nearby private schools

    Policy Area 2: Improved Quality of Education

    Action 2.1 Consolidate and advance critical basic education sector reforms

    Action 2.2 Independently review NAT

    Action 2.3 Improve the curriculum and length of schooling

    Action 2.4 Address efficiency and equity concerns

    Action 2.5 Revise the system of performance incentives for teachers/principals

    Policy Area 3: Increased Basic Education Budget and Strengthened Institutions

    Action 3.1 Increase public spending on basic education

    Action 3.2 Improve utilization of education resources




    1. The Philippines has the potential to attain much better education outcomes. In particular, the objectives of (i) achieving universal primary education, (ii) significantly improving the quality of basic education, and (iii) reducing education inequality are not out of reach. This potential is evident from the faster rates of progress in education attainment achieved by developing countries that once lagged behind the Philippines. To achieve these higher outcomes, however, the government administration will need to be selective in focusing its basic education reform agenda on several strategically critical issues.


    Policy Area 1: Universal Primary Education and Increased Secondary Net Enrolment
    Action 1.1: Intensify support for affirmative action for the poor and marginalized groups


    1. Programs that address the special education needs of these groups need to be fortified. Important actions to support these programs are the (i) implementation of a six-year basic education strategic plan that puts in place reforms, but relevant to the socio-cultural context of ARMM, (ii) adoption of alternative modes of education delivery to address the needs of congested schools, out-of-school youth, disaster and conflict-prone areas, and, (iii) innovations for improving adult literacy and entrepreneurial skills and opportunities.


    Action 1.2: Provide complementary support for the CCT program


    1. Drawing on the lessons learned from international experience and evaluation of similar programs in different countries, the CCT/4Ps program has been designed to simultaneously improve the consumption, education, and health of extremely poor families. This program is being progressively expanded with the aim of covering all extremely poor families. In planning the deployment of teachers, construction of classrooms and provision of educational materials and other assistance, the DepED needs to prioritize the CCT/4Ps communities to ensure that the increased demand for education generated by the CCT/4Ps program is complemented by an adequate supply of education services.


    Action 1.3: Expand the provision of private education services


    1. An important option for educating children that cannot be accommodated by the existing public schools is to private schooling in return for an agreed price per student (capitation) to be paid by the government. The Philippine experience shows the Education Service Contracting (ESC) Program improves school quality, relieves congestion in public high schools, maintains the financial viability of private secondary schools (more than one-third of private secondary school enrollments are supported by the program), keeps the overall costs of public secondary education in check, and encourages households to invest in education. (Patrinos et al, forthcoming). The experience in some countries, like Colombia (Angrist et al, 2002), shows that voucher schemes can also be highly cost-effective, provided they are appropriately designed and regulated. Expansion of the current Philippine voucher program, however, is not recommended due to design and governance issues.

    Action 1.4: Focus public school construction in areas without nearby private schools


    1. In areas where there are no private schools, schools can be built using community-driven and/or principal-led construction, as both schemes have produced good quality classrooms at reasonable cost, while promoting transparency, accountability and community participation.


    Policy Area 2: Improved Quality of Education
    Action 2.1: Consolidate and advance critical reforms in basic educatiton


    1. The current reforms to improve teaching and learning practices addresses a wide range of issues through a package of interventions.5 Despite delays in its implementation, it is steadily, albeit slowly, making progress and gaining widespread acceptance among influential advocacy groups and stakeholders. Consolidating and advancing these critical and highly promising reforms is preferable to introducing completely new programs that do not take advantage of ongoing reform efforts. The history of repeated education reforms in the Philippines shows that they have had little cumulative transformational impact, because few have been given enough time to take root, scale-up and mature.


    Action 2.2: Subject NAT to an independent review


    1. The National Achievement Test (NAT) system is an expensive exercise whose main objective is not clear. The NAT scores are not being used for promoting students to the next grade. Instead, it appears that their main purpose is to assess learning achievement outcomes. If this is the main purpose, however, it can be achieved at much lower cost through sample-based testing, and the resulting savings could be used to help fund training of teachers and school heads. It is important, therefore, to review the methodology and objectives of the NAT by an independent board or task-force.


    Action 2.3: Improve the curriculum and length of the basic education cycle


    1. The basic education curriculum needs to be reformed, but such a reform is best carried out as part of the broader discussion on the extension of the Philippine education cycle. Advocates of extension argue that the Philippine education cycle is too short compared to that of other countries, resulting in curriculum congestion and low student learning achievement. An examination of international practice reveals that the Philippines needs to add two more years of equivalent senior secondary education6 to align itself with the 6+3+3+4 international education cycle. Critics of such an extension point out that a longer education cycle does not automatically lead to greater student learning achievement, as shown by a statistical analysis of TIMSS data (Felipe and Porio 2010). For an extended education cycle to yield the desired benefit, it is necessary to ensure that the education system is effective and efficient in producing student learning. Given the current underfunding of education in the Philippines, however, there is a high risk that the introduction of an additional two years of education could come at the expense of deteriorating education opportunities for the poor, as scarce resources and attention may be shifted away from the implementation of the basic education reform. Adding two more years of high school to establish a 3-year senior secondary level of education into the country’s education cycle, therefore, only makes sense if it is accompanied by a commensurate increase in the education budget.




    1. The current curriculum is overcrowded and spreads school time too thinly over too wide a variety of subjects and other activities. Proponents of education cycle extension argue that students need more time to learn basic subjects like mathematics, science, reading, and social studies in sufficient depth. An analysis of the current curriculum to identify gaps in basic subjects and assess the implications for additional inputs and outputs including teacher training, educational materials, infrastructure, laboratories and equipment needs should be undertaken. It is critically important to review the core curriculum with a view to identifying the main items of instruction that should be the focus of attention for the eventual two additional years of education. Another option that also deserves consideration is to explore alternatives to increase the actual time on task either by reducing the number of school holidays, or increasing the number of school days or reducing teachers’ absenteeism.


    Action 2.4: Address efficiency and equity concerns


    1. A phased and flexible strategy based on public-private partnership may help the authorities address the efficiency and equity concerns arising from a desire to expand education opportunities in spite of tight budgetary constraints. One such strategy to consider is to finance upper secondary education with user (enrollment) fees, while providing an increasing number of scholarships and student loans for deserving poor students. Recipients of scholarships and student loan programs should be free to enroll in a private or a public school.7


    Action 2.5: Revise the system of performance incentives for teachers/principals


    1. Recently, the DepED has tried linking student achievement scores to teachers’ pay and promotion. Though the incentive involved is quite small, it provides a good opening for developing a more powerful outcome-performance bonus scheme. The details of the design of such a scheme need to be carefully thought through, however, and its impact on outcomes on teaching practices and student learning needs to be rigorously tested and evaluated. The empirical evidence on the impact of teacher performance incentive schemes is very mixed. Badly designed schemes, for example, lead to unintended consequences such as greater cheating. Another example of unintended perverse consequences is the policy of financing end-of-the year bonuses through the “savings” achieved by individual work units. This practice has encouraged work units to delay and withhold funding of expenditures on priority education activities. The Administration should consider eliminating or modifying this practice.


    Policy Area 3: Increased Basic Education Budget and Strengthened Institutions
    Action 3.1: Increase public spending on basic education


    1. Given the rapidly growing school-age population, persistently low public spending on education and magnitude of the education reform challenges, additional resources for the basic education sector are needed. Meeting the MDG and Education-for-All (EFA) goals in basic education would roughly require some PhP2,113 billion over the period 2011-2015. (See preliminary estimates in Table 3). The necessary budgetary increases to achieve this spending target must come from both the central and local governments. This requires, among others, motivating the LGUs to invest more of their own resources in local education improvements and supporting the empowerment of schools and communities. Examples of actions that can be taken to mobilize additional resources for the basic education sector include:

    • Increasing the obligations-to-allocations ratio to 99 percent during the first two years of the new administration;

    • Raising the national government appropriations for basic education as a percentage of GDP to between 4.0 to 5.0 percent of GDP by 2015. This would elevate national government funding to a level comparable to international practices for middle income countries;

    • Require matching grants from LGUs for national government (NG) assistance to minimize “substitution,” while developing a performance-based formula for allocating a part of the education budget increase.


    Table 4: Estimated Resource Requirements to Achieve MDG (Education) and EFA Goals

    (in PhP millions at current prices; 2011-2015)




    Note: Preliminary estimates were arrived at using available data on input shortages, unit cost, and school-age going population projections as of March 2010 and cost projections of Manasan (2007). This will be further refined by the joint DepED-World Bank-DBM Team preparing the Basic Education Spending Plan.

    Action 3.2: Improve utilization of education resources


    1. An improved utilization of education resources is critical for translating more inputs into greater outputs and outcomes. Several actions are needed here, beginning with the allocation of additional resources to high priority activities. These priority activities include:

    • increasing the availability of classrooms, teachers and educational materials to meet supply gaps through the use of effective targeting system, principal-led construction and rehabilitation of schools/classrooms, and expanded capitation scheme for enrolling school-aged children that cannot be accommodated in public schools in private schools,

    • full implementation of the SBM policy, including the provision of flexible school grants and performance bonuses for schools, teachers and local school boards,

    • full implementation of the new equity-based School Maintenance and other Operating Expenses (MOOE) formula developed by Boncodin et al. (2009) to allow schools to adequately respond to the needs at their level and provide fiscal space to implement their school improvement plans,

    • expanding the CCT and other cost-effective interventions to stimulate schooling demand among poor households, and

    • instituting an independent and credible system for the regular monitoring, assessment and public dissemination of the performance of schools, teachers, and local school boards.8




    1. Specifically, funding of these activities will strengthen the decision-making authority and capacity of School Governing Councils (SGCs), improve incentives for better teacher and school performance, and increase school accountability.9 It is equally important to ensure that the allocated resources are spent for the intended purposes with minimum delay and leakages. The recent Basic Education Public Expenditure Review (World Bank, forthcoming) reveals that the budget utilization rate, measured in terms of obligations relative to total allotment releases, has fallen from 97 percent in 2004 to 92 percent in 2008. Some education budget items have utilization rates that are even lower. For example, the Maintenance and Other Operating Expenses (MOOE) utilization rate was only 72 percent in 2006-2008. These observations point to inadequate absorptive capacity.


    C. Quick Wins and Long-term Impact


    1. The successful implementation of a reform agenda critically depends on good sequencing. Early victories in the implementation of the reform agenda create goodwill and excitement among education stakeholders. The resulting political capital creates momentum for the passage of more difficult reforms later.




    1. There are several strategically important actions that can be taken immediately to launch the reform programs in the three policy areas addressed above. These actions are:

    • Issuing an Executive Order mandating the achievement of universal primary enrolment and increased secondary net enrolment as official target, while assigning the budget needed to carry it out (as per Table 3), and taking measures to improve education budget execution,

    • Providing block grants directly transferred to schools with clear and transparent guidelines for accountability as well as full implementation of the new equity-based school MOOE allocation formula,

    • Reducing the number of school holidays and teachers’ classroom absences,

    • Strengthening the decision-making authority and capacity of the School Governing Councils (SGCs) and promoting regular school “performance accountability meetings” with the public,

    • Providing adequate budget for educational materials and training of teachers supporting the mother tongue language policy and those teaching in multi-grade classes, and

    • Developing and pilot-testing more powerful performance bonus schemes for teachers and schools.




    1. These actions are expected to have an immediate positive impact on basic enrollment and other education outcomes. Together with the other actions proposed earlier, they could usher in a more rapid and sustained pace of education progress. As the Philippine Human Development Report 2008/2009 (Human Development Network 2009: 72) points out, school performance rises significantly when ‘in addition to greater autonomy, schools are provided with local capacity building, have established rigorous external accountability through close relations between schools and communities, and have been stimulated to innovate.’ The experience in the Philippines’ Third Elementary Education Project, in particular, strongly indicates that the impact of school-based management on student learning is positive and remains substantial even after completion of the project. This impact is expected to be further raised in the long run with the development of a stronger culture of accountability for performance and the establishment of incentives to encourage improved education. It is critical, however, that the basic education reforms be allowed to mature and take root. Successful reforms in other countries normally take years, if not decades, of sustained and cumulative implementation of incremental and, sometimes, more radical reforms.


    References
    Alvarez, Jesus, Vicente Garcia Moreno, and Harry Patrinos (2006). “Institutional Effects as Determinants of Learning Outcomes: Exploring State Variations in Mexico.” Washington DC: The World Bank.

    Angrist, Joshua, Eric Bettinger, Erik Bloom, Elizabeth King and Michael Kremer (2002). “Vouchers for Private Schooling in Colombia: Evidence from a Randomized Natural Experiment.” American Economic Review 92, No. 5: 1535-1558.


    Boncodin, Emilia and Honesto Nuqui (2008). “Study on the Equitable Allocation of the Department of Education’s Maintenance and Other Operating Expenses (MOOE).” Manila: AusAID.
    Di Gropelo, Emanuela (2009). “Philippine Skills Study Report.” Washington DC: The World Bank.
    Felipe, Abraham and Carolina Porio (2010). “Length of School Cycle and the Quality of Education.” Unpublished.
    Fiszbein, Ariel, and Norbert Schady with Fransciso H.G. Ferreira, Margaret Grosh, Nial Kelleher, Pedro Olinto, and Emmanuel Skoufias (2009). “Conditional Cash Transfers: Reducing Present and Future Poverty.” Washington DC: The World Bank.
    Hanushek, Eric and Ludger Wobmann (2007). “The Role of School Improvement in Economic Development.” World Bank Research Working Paper 4122. Washington DC: The World Bank.
    Human Development Network (2009). Philippines Human Development Report 2008/2009: Institutions, politics, and human development.
    Jimenez, Emmanuel, Marlaine Lockheed, and Vicente Paqueo (1991). “The Relative Efficiency of Private and Public Schools in Developing Countries.” World Bank Research Observer, Oxford University Press, Vol 6 (2).
    Manasan, Rosario G. (2007). “Financing the Millennium Development Goals: The Philippines.” PIDS Discussion Paper Series No. 2007-06. Makati: PIDS.
    Orazem, Peter and Elizabeth King (2007). “Schooling in Developing Countries: The Roles of Supply, Demand and Government Policy,” Chapter 55, Handbook of Development Economics, Volume 4, T.P. Schultz and J. Strauss (eds.). Amsterdam: Elsevier B.V. Press.
    Orbeta, Aniceto (2008). Background Paper on Higher Education. Manila. Unpublished.
    Patrinos, Harry Anthony, Lynnette Perez, Juliana Guaqueta, Emilio Porta, Honesto Nuqui, and Michael Alba (forthcoming). “Philippines Education Service Contracting Study.” Draft. Manila.
    UNESCO (2010). EFA Global Monitoring Report 2010: Reaching the marginalized. Paris: UNESCO/Oxford University Press.
    World Bank (forthcoming). “Philippines Basic Education Public Expenditure Review.” Draft. Manila.



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