Education in Indonesia: A White Elephant?

After successfully improving access to education in the early 1990s through virtually universal primary school completion and similar positive trends at the senior secondary level in 2005, Indonesia began investing heavily in improving learning outcomes. For almost a decade, the country has been spe...

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Veröffentlicht in:ASEAN economic bulletin 2018-08, Vol.35 (2), p.185-199
Hauptverfasser: Kurniawati, Sandra, Suryadarma, Daniel, Bima, Luhur, Yusrina, Asri
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container_title ASEAN economic bulletin
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creator Kurniawati, Sandra
Suryadarma, Daniel
Bima, Luhur
Yusrina, Asri
description After successfully improving access to education in the early 1990s through virtually universal primary school completion and similar positive trends at the senior secondary level in 2005, Indonesia began investing heavily in improving learning outcomes. For almost a decade, the country has been spending about a fifth of its public funds on education. In particular, teachers have received significant salary increases through a certification programme. This paper provides a long-run overview of numeracy and literacy among fifteen-year-old Indonesians using an international test, spanning from 2003 until 2015. It is found that improvements in learning levels are too small to justify the substantial investments that the country has undertaken. The government’s major education policies have not produced the expected results. It is argued that without adding accountability measures that focus on learning outcomes, there is little chance for the investments to provide noteworthy returns in the form of remarkably improved learning outcomes.
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identifier ISSN: 2339-5095
ispartof ASEAN economic bulletin, 2018-08, Vol.35 (2), p.185-199
issn 2339-5095
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language eng
recordid cdi_proquest_journals_2088014585
source PAIS Index; Business Source Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Access to education
Accountability
Certification
Cognition & reasoning
Economic growth
Education
Education policy
Educational attainment
Educational objectives
Elementary schools
Expenditures
Government
Government spending
Labor market
Learning
Literacy
Mathematics
Mathematics education
Numeracy
Outcomes of education
Presidents
Public schools
Quality of education
Research Articles on The Indonesian Economy in Transition
Secondary education
Southeast Asian studies
Students
Teacher education
Teachers
Wages & salaries
World Bank
title Education in Indonesia: A White Elephant?
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