Do household characteristics matter in schooling decisions in urban Kenya?

Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine household characteristics and schooling decisions in terms of enrollment and type of school in an urban setting in Nairobi.Design methodology approach - The paper uses a cross-sectional data set collected in 2005. The sample comprises 7,475 primary s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Equal Opportunities International 2009-09, Vol.28 (7), p.591-608
Hauptverfasser: Waithanji Ngware, Moses, Oketch, Moses, Chika Ezeh, Alex, Noris Mudege, Netsayi
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine household characteristics and schooling decisions in terms of enrollment and type of school in an urban setting in Nairobi.Design methodology approach - The paper uses a cross-sectional data set collected in 2005. The sample comprises 7,475 primary school-aged children. A probit model was estimated to show what influences decisions at household level.Findings - Analysis shows that different household and individual attributes motivate different decisions. A considerable proportion (40 per cent) of children from the poorest quintile attends non-public schools compared to 34 per cent from the richest quintile. The findings reveal that better-off households are more represented in the free primary education (FPE) programme. The predicted probability of a decision to attend a public school for a primary school-age child increases as the household wealth increases.Practical implications - The paper concludes that poorer households are least attending and may be excluded from free public schools.Originality value - The paper demystifies the notion that introduction of FPE in developing countries is a pro-poor policy.
ISSN:0261-0159
2040-7149
1758-7093
2040-7157
DOI:10.1108/02610150910996425