PAPER: The Fiscal Cost of Weak Governance: Evidence from Teacher Absence in India
The Fiscal Cost of Weak Governance: Evidence from Teacher Absence in India
Karthik Muralidharan, Jishnu Das, Alaka Holla, and Aakash Mohpal
NBER Working Paper No. 20299
July 2014
ABSTRACT
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Karthik Muralidharan, Jishnu Das, Alaka Holla, and Aakash Mohpal
NBER Working Paper No. 20299
July 2014
ABSTRACT
We
construct a new nationally-representative panel dataset of schools
across 1297 villages in India and find that the large investments in
public primary education over the past decade have led to substantial
improvements in input-based measures of school quality, including
infrastructure, pupil-teacher ratios, and monitoring. However, teacher
absence continues to be high, with 23.6 percent of teachers in public
schools across rural India being absent during unannounced visits to
schools. Improvements in school infrastructure and service conditions
are not correlated with lower teacher absence. We find two robust
correlations in the nationally-representative panel data that
corroborate findings from smaller-scale experiments. First, reductions
in pupil-teacher ratios are correlated with increased teacher absence.
Second, increases in the frequency of inspections are strongly
correlated with lower teacher absence. We estimate that the fiscal cost
of teacher absence in India is around $1.5 billion per year, and that
investing in better governance by hiring more inspectors to increase the
frequency of monitoring could be over ten times more cost effective at
increasing teacher-student contact time (net of teacher absence) than
hiring more teachers.