Johnes, Jill, Burney, Nadeem A., Al-Enezia, Mohammed and Al-Musallam, Marwa (2013) The efficiency of public schools: The case of Kuwait. Education Economics, 21 (4). pp. 5661-5672. ISSN 0964-5292
Abstract

This paper investigates the technical, and allocative efficiencies of public schools in Kuwait over four levels of schooling (kindergartens, primary, intermediate and secondary) and two periods (1999/2000 and 2004/2005) using data envelopment analysis. Mean pure technical efficiency varies between 0.695 and 0.852 across all levels of education; the majority of schools at kindergarten, primary and intermediate levels are operating at a point where returns to scale are increasing, and there are considerable cost efficiencies to be gained. In a second-stage analysis of the determinants of efficiency, teacher salary and the proportion of teaching staff who are Kuwaiti are highly significant in explaining school efficiency at all levels. The former has a positive effect and the latter a negative effect. All-girls schools have significantly higher efficiency than all-boys schools. There is limited evidence that geographical location affects efficiency, and this may be a consequence of differences between regions in terms of affluence or density of population.

Information
Library
Documents
[thumbnail of JohnesEfficiency.pdf]
Preview
JohnesEfficiency.pdf - Accepted Version

Download (266kB) | Preview
[thumbnail of Revised_Paper_submitted_to_Ed_Econ_May_11.docx]
Revised_Paper_submitted_to_Ed_Econ_May_11.docx - Accepted Version
Restricted to Repository staff only

Download (106kB)
Statistics

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Add to AnyAdd to TwitterAdd to FacebookAdd to LinkedinAdd to PinterestAdd to Email