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Africa: Education for All?
AfricaFocus Bulletin
Feb 28, 2010 (100228)
(Reposted from sources cited below)
Editor's Note
"Many more girls are in school and enrolment rates are on the rise,
due to higher-quality aid and to political commitment in developing
countries. However, these achievements could be derailed by the
global economic crisis ... With 72 million children still out of
school, the world's poorest countries urgently need a global
financing initiative that can deliver the resources to scale up to
Education For All." - Oxfam
Education - particularly the education of girls - is fundamental to
development, and is increasingly recognized as not only a national
but also a global responsibility. The recent international effort
called the Fast Track Initiative has significantly expanded basic
education, notes Oxfam International in a new report. But it still
lacks necessary support from many rich countries, particularly the
United States, and is threatened by the global recession. Essential
changes, says Oxfam, require not only more money but also changes
in transparency, governance, and flexibility for different national
conditions, following the example of initiatives such as the Global
Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria.
This AfricaFocus Bulletin contains excerpts from the Oxfam briefing
note. The full briefing note, as well as a more extensive report on
Resourcing Global Education, is available at
http://www.oxfam.org/en/policy/rescuing-education-for-all
For previous AfricaFocus Bulletins related to education, see
http://www.africafocus.org/educexp.php
Ray Almeida
Ray Almeida, one of the leading American Cape Verdean activists for
Cape Verde and Africa at large, died on January 30 in Boston, aged
66. He was one of two American Cape Verdeans awarded the Ordem
Amilcar Cabral in 2005. See http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/cv0908.php
An obituary from the Cape Verdean web site FORCV
(http://www.forcv.com) is available at:
http://tinyurl.com/yf94z4q
An obituary appeared in the Washington Post
(http://www.washingtonpost.com) on February 9, 2010 - direct link
at http://tinyurl.com/yf5z9g9
A memorial service will be held in Washington, DC, on Saturday,
March 6, at 11 a.m., at Unity of Washington (formerly Metropolitan
Baptist Church), at 1225 R. St. NW.
++++++++++++++++++++++end editor's note+++++++++++++++++++++++
Rescuing Education for All
Key recommendations
- Donors should launch a Global Fund for Education at the 2010
G8/G20 meeting in Canada, in close partnership with Southern
governments and civil society organizations. This initiative should
be the result of a comprehensive reform of the Fast Track
Initiative (FTI).
- The FTI Board of Directors should name an inclusive Transition
Working Group to design broad reforms to the initiative, responding
to the recommendations of the external evaluation of the FTI.
- All donors must urgently increase their aid to basic education
and improve the quality of their aid to ensure that it is
transparent and predictable, that it builds capacity in recipient
countries, and that it is aligned with country priorities and
strategies.
- The World Bank should scale up its assistance for basic education
in the poorest countries. It should give up control of the FTI,
while strengthening its participation in the reformed initiative as
a key donor partner.
- Developing country governments should continue to prioritize
basic education by increasing the proportion of national resources
spent on education and by improving the quality of their
educational programs.
Rescuing Education for All
How reform of the Fast Track Initiative should lead to a Global
Fund for Education
Oxfam Briefing Note 19 January 2010
[Excerpts only. Full text available at
http://www.oxfam.org/en/policy/rescuing-education-for-all
For further information on the issues raised in this paper please
e-mail advocacy@oxfaminternational.org]
Remarkable progress has been made in the last ten years toward
achieving the education-related Millennium Development Goals. Many
more girls are in school and enrolment rates are on the rise, due
to higher-quality aid and to political commitment in developing
countries. However, these achievements could be derailed by the
global economic crisis, newly falling aid levels, and educational
challenges. With 72 million children still out of school, the
world's poorest countries urgently need a global financing
initiative that can deliver the resources to scale up to Education
For All.
Based on a new research report by Oxfam, this note examines the
EFA-Fast Track Initiative (FTI) - both its positive contributions
and its current limitations. It argues for the reform of the FTI
into a more ambitious, effective Global Fund for Education. This
redesigned initiative must feature autonomous management and
inclusive governance; greater country ownership through better
quality aid; improved accountability structures; and more
flexibility to respond to the needs of children in
conflict-affected and fragile states. Donors must prioritize such
a transformation in 2010.
Introduction
Education: An unfinished success story
The first decade of our new millennium was poised to go down in
history as a hopeful turning point for the world"s children.
Remarkable progress was being forged across the developing world,
spurred by a new global commitment to the Education For All (EFA)
goals. These goals were answered by substantial increases in aid
during the first half of the decade, extensive debt relief, and a
growing political commitment to education in developing countries.
The EFA Fast Track Initiative was also established in 2002 as a
global partnership to support national efforts to reach universal
primary education.
Results soon followed. The number of children out of school
worldwide fell by 33 million to a total of 72 million in 2007. The
primary school net enrolment rate for all developing countries
increased twice as fast in the years after 1999 as it did in the
1990s. Aid increases enabled many African countries to abolish
primary school tuition fees, leading to substantial enrolment
increases. The gender gap began to narrow, and gender parity at
the primary level was achieved in two-thirds of countries with
data.
However, things took a less promising turn in the middle of the
decade. By 2005, global aid commitments for basic education had
begun to stagnate, followed by an alarming 22 per cent decline
between 2006 and 2007.
In addition to this slowdown, the quality of aid for education has
been unacceptably poor: it is too often uncoordinated, fragmented,
and driven by donor priorities. For example, in 2006, Cambodia had
16 donors implementing 57 projects in the education sector alone.
Some donors continue to bypass national systems, to provide their
aid programs in isolation from national strategies, and to use
short-term trajectories, undermining the longer-term impact of
their aid.
Big challenges have also remained in meeting the Education for All
goals. Despite the upward enrolment trend, there were still more
children out of school globally in 2007 than primary school-aged
children in the entire developed world. In spite of strong evidence
that educating girls delivers powerful economic and public health
benefits, girls' enrolment has continued to lag behind that of
boys, especially at the secondary level.
Then in 2008, the global economic crisis hit. The long-term impact
on education is predicted to be severe, as it has been in past
recessions. Some of the world's poorest families may be forced to
pull their children out of school for economic reasons. With
malnutrition on the rise, the education of many more children will
suffer due to hunger and stunted growth. And sub-Saharan Africa
alone could see a reduction of $4.6bn per year in the total
resources available for education over 2009 and 2010.
At a moment when it is needed the most, the world's education
financing initiative - the FTI - is failing to deliver. Lack of
consistent donor commitment, as well as structural and technical
issues, have meant that the FTI has not managed to galvanize a
substantial increase in education resources, and has been unable
to quickly and effectively deploy its existing resources.
The EFA-Fast Track Initiative: a giant step forward for education
The FTI has developed a truly innovative model. First, committed
developing countries take the lead in designing national education
strategies that reflect their own unique priorities. Then, these
plans are endorsed by in-country donors based on agreed standards,
signaling investment-worthiness. Finally, donors fund the
remainder of the plan that cannot be financed domestically, both
by aligning their bilateral aid and by contributing to a
multi-donor trust fund for FTI-endorsed countries known as the
Catalytic Fund.
This approach is designed to stimulate increased resources through
a "catalytic effect", whereby new and existing donors will have
the confidence to increase their support to endorsed countries
based on the high quality of these Education Sector Plans. It is
also designed to improve aid effectiveness, by stimulating
country-level donor coordination, harmonization of processes, and
alignment of aid programs with country priorities.
While it is difficult to attribute positive results solely to the
FTI, there is an apparent association between FTI support and
positive educational results. Impressively, FTI countries in
sub-Saharan Africa achieved enrolment increases of 64 per cent
from 2000 to 2007, double the rate of non-FTI countries. Sixteen
FTI countries have already achieved gender parity in primary
school. In most FTI countries, bilateral donors have also made
important progress on many of the aid effectiveness indicators
agreed in Paris in 2005, improving the efficiency and impact of
aid.
Specific elements of the FTI's design have been key to the progress
it has achieved:
- The endorsement of high-quality education sector plans has been
one of the crowning achievements of the initiative. These plans are
approved by the in-country Local Donor Group, which then agrees in
principle to meet the financing gap identified in the plan. The
promise of increased funding following endorsement has been an
incentive to improve policy and planning at country level, and to
elevate the prioritization of education.
- Policy dialogue where it belongs - at the country level. The FTI
approach avoids dictating priorities, and prioritizes country
ownership over education policies and strategies. Recent evidence
shows that the FTI has improved strategic planning and policy
dialogue in some countries.
- A global financing mechanism. The FTI's Catalytic Fund is
central to the success of the initiative. It has been a critical
source of funds to narrow or close the primary-education financing
gap in many countries.
- A flexible two-track approach. The initiative encourages broad
donor participation, both through coordinated bilateral aid
programs aligned with country plans, and also through the Catalytic
Fund. This flexibility provides a range of options for donors and
is an important contribution to improving the effectiveness of
bilateral aid.
- Donor coordination and alignment has been another hallmark of
the FTI approach. The initiative has catalyzed improvements in
country-level donor cooperation and alignment of bilateral aid with
education sector plans - minimizing the transaction costs
associated with overseeing and implementing aid programs and
increasing impact. Political and structural limitations
Despite its accomplishments, the impact of the Fast Track
Initiative has been limited by structural constraints and
political problems. ...
The following areas of particular concern, discussed in more detail
in the Oxfam research report, are related less to the FTI's
overall approach or model, than to how it has been implemented:
- Lack of political and operational autonomy: The World Bank plays
a dominant role in the initiative. At the global level, the Bank is
the host of the FTI Secretariat and its staff; it is the trustee
of the Catalytic Fund; the frequent implementer of FTI technical
assistance grants; and is a prominent member of the FTI's Board of
Directors. At country level, the World Bank influences decisions
on endorsement, and it determines the way Catalytic Fund grants
are delivered, and on what terms. This dynamic has led to
confusion about the identity of the initiative, a lack of buy-in
from other donors, and potential conflicts of interest.
- Inadequate management and governance: In addition to its lack of
autonomy, the FTI Secretariat is massively under-resourced for the
scope and ambition of the initiative. The initiative's global
governance structures are dominated by donors, without meaningful
representation from developing country governments and civil
society organizations. At country level, FTI structures are often
weak and lack visibility. Decision making on education sector
plans is led by donors, with no mechanisms to ensure national civil
society and stakeholder dialogue with the government on education
sector priorities.
- Poor quality aid from the Catalytic Fund: In contrast to the
positive progress on aid effectiveness through FTI bilateral donor
processes, the Catalytic Fund has a poor track record on aid
effectiveness. It has been plagued by disbursement delays since
2007, when a decision by the World Bank Board of Directors imposed
time-consuming bureaucratic procedures. This has resulted in poor
short-term predictability of its aid. The Catalytic Fund as
managed by the World Bank also lacks the flexibility to provide
aid through the channels most appropriate to the needs of
recipient countries. Finally, overall transparency about the
operations of the Catalytic Fund is weak.
- Failure to mobilize resources to the scale required: A small
group of committed donors accounts for the majority of commitments
to the Catalytic Fund, with the Netherlands, Spain and the United
Kingdom leading the pack. The FTI Secretariat estimates that $1.2bn
in additional funds will be needed in 2010 alone to meet the
financing gaps in FTI-endorsed countries, surely a vast
underestimate. ...
- Exclusion of conflict-affected and fragile states: More than
one-third of the world's out-of-school children live in twenty
conflict-affected countries, yet only one-fifth of education aid is
directed to these situations. ...
Improving on the FTI model: a vision for the next generation
The structural and political limitations of the Fast Track
Initiative have seriously hampered its ability to scale up aid for
basic education, and current piecemeal reform attempts are failing
to address adequately the fundamental problems identified by
Oxfam's research and by the external evaluation. However, the
solutions are straightforward and achievable.
Rather than starting from scratch with a new initiative, we should
build upon the considerable progress and investments that have
already been made in the FTI. Likewise we must avoid fragmenting
the global work for EFA by allowing a new initiative to be created
in parallel to the FTI. This would only reduce the impact of our
collective efforts.
The next-generation education financing initiative must learn the
lessons - both positive and negative - from the experience of the
global health funds, including the Global Fund to Fight AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM); and it must build upon the
excellent recommendations of the FTI's recent external evaluation.
In this paper, we will refer to a reformed, redesigned FTI as a
Global Fund for Education. A new name is needed to recharge the
energy and as an outward sign of the improvements within. The term
"Global Fund for Education" is favored by advocates because it
clearly communicates a purpose. However, the name is less
important than the substance.
The right kind of leadership
A Global Fund for Education must begin with the kind of leadership
and management that will enable its success:
- A fully autonomous multilateral partnership, formally and
legally independent of all other institutions including the World
Bank, UN agencies, and bilateral actors;
- A strategic re-branding of the FTI to create a break with the
past, to emphasize its autonomy, and to facilitate a higher global
profile;
- An independent Secretariat, with adequate resources to monitor
and report on financing gaps, bilateral aid flows and aid
effectiveness; to increase the initiative's presence and
communication systems at country level; to make operational
decisions about the disbursement of trust fund monies; and to hold
donors and recipient governments to account for their commitments;
- An expanded multi-donor trust fund to replace the Catalytic
Fund, capable of delivering funds both quickly and accountably,
and on an ambitious scale in order urgently to meet the financing
needs in endorsed countries. This fund should have an initial
donor financing target of $5bn for its first year, scaling up
donor commitments to cover two-thirds of the yearly EFA financing
gap within five years.
- Democratic governance structures, both globally and at country
level, that build on best practice in similar initiatives and that
guarantee participation for civil society representatives and other
stakeholders;
- Expert review panels that include both international education
specialists and local experts to better assess and improve the
quality of education sector plans. Panels should include a focus
on the component of plans that address girls' education and gender
parity.
Real country ownership
A strengthened education financing initiative would lead best
practice in aid effectiveness by helping to transfer ownership of
the task of delivering education from donors to the developing
countries themselves. To do this, it should provide aid in a way
that gives recipient countries more information, capacity, and
control. This means communicating transparently about the details
and timing of incoming resources; building country capacity by
using government systems and investing in civil society oversight;
and ultimately turning over control by allowing countries to
manage for themselves both their development agenda and the aid
resources.
A Global Fund for Education should:
- Commit to the transparent disclosure of information, by
following the example of the Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria,
and comply with the International Aid Transparency Initiative's
common information standards;
- Provide more long-term, predictable financing through the global
trust fund, by committing aid in five-year timetables;
- Strengthen the capacity of recipient country governments by
using country systems for public financial management and
procurement;
- Build the capacity of national civil society organizations to
hold their governments accountable for expenditures and delivery
of education programs, by dedicating three per cent of total
funding to this purpose;
- Let countries lead, by providing more aid through budget support
and other aid delivery modalities that are aligned with country
priorities. Budget support is the only aid modality that can help
governments pay the salaries of the 10.3 million new teachers that
are needed worldwide to achieve universal primary education by
2015. This funding should be conditioned on performance against
mutually agreed education outcomes.
Expanded scope
Achieving Education For All will require a global education
initiative with scaled up ambition. A Global Fund for Education
should therefore:
- Expand to include the full Education For All goals, while
maintaining a focus on universal primary education. It should have
the flexibility to respond to changing needs in the basic education
sector. Countries should be free to forge a democratic consensus on
education priorities and focus, rather than having to work within
donor-set priorities.
- Increase its flexibility in order to reach the millions of
children in conflict-affected or fragile states. This challenge
should not be relegated to a separate fund, but should be part of
a coherent global education initiative. Building on the FTI's
progressive framework, a redesigned initiative should feature a
more flexible endorsement process, with support tailored to
country circumstances and conditioned on progress.
- Reform the policy framework to eliminate the use of universal
benchmarks, such as teacher salary ranges and other
one-size-fits-all prescriptions. Rather, benchmarks should be
chosen based on the unique situations of individual countries.
Conclusion: Time for a Global Fund for Education
The international community must now band together in partnership
to tackle one of the most pressing human rights challenges of our
day: the denial of a basic education to millions of girls and
boys, as well as youths and adults, in the poorest countries.
Seventy-two million children are depending on a transformation of
the FTI into an ambitious, effective, Global Fund for Education.
How US leadership could turn the tide
Although a Global Fund for Education should not be the project of
any one donor, the US is well-placed to provide strong political
leadership.
The US is currently behind the curve in supporting the Education
for All goals, and has not actively participated in the Fast Track
Initiative. However, President Obama made a commitment as a
presidential candidate to create a $2bn global education fund, and
this promise has been reiterated by Secretary of State Clinton,
who has a strong track record of support for global education
programs. Also, in 2008 the US committed to make its foreign aid
more effective when it signed on to the Accra Agenda for Action at
the High-Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness.
The Global Fund for Education could become a model for broader US
development reform - not only improving the impact of aid for
education, but also piloting broader US efforts to make its aid
more effective.
Why all donors must engage now
Education For All will not be achieved without immediate, concerted
action by all donor governments and institutions. The reality is
that reform of the education financing architecture is worthless
without high-level political leadership from a critical mass of
donors. The first formal combined G8–G20 Summit in Canada mid-2010
provides the perfect opportunity to launch this collaboration.
Developing country governments have demonstrated their commitment
to education and have appealed for urgent support. The Global Fund
for Education must be the answer to that call.
Recommendations
- Donor governments should launch a redesigned global education
financing initiative – a Global Fund for Education – at the
Canadian G8–G20 meeting in 2010, in close partnership with
Southern governments and civil society, This initiative should
embody comprehensive reform of the FTI, transforming it into an
initiative that is capable of achieving Education for All.
- As part of this, donors should commit to fully replenishing the
FTI's Catalytic Fund. This funding should be conditioned on
comprehensive reform of the FTI. Replenishment is urgently needed
to avoid a disruptive drop in aid to FTI countries with devastating
impact for children, so donors must not wait until the reform
process is complete. A technical working group should be appointed
immediately to set up a new financing instrument and to quickly
transfer existing CF funds into a more flexible, speedy instrument
as part of a reformed initiative.
- In the lead up to the 2010 G8, the FTI Board should name a
Transition Working Group that better represents the wider FTI
partnership, to design strategic and comprehensive reforms to the
Fast Track Initiative. It should respond to the recommendations of
the Mid-Term Evaluation and work closely with the FTI Secretariat
to build on extensive institutional knowledge. Developing country
governments and civil society partners, North and South, should
participate actively in shaping the reforms.
- All donors must urgently increase their aid to basic education,
ensuring the economic crisis does not result in short-term aid cuts
that will have long-term consequences for the poorest children.
They should improve the quality of their aid to ensure that it is
transparent and predictable, that it builds capacity in recipient
countries, and that it is aligned with country priorities and
strategies.
- The World Bank should scale up its lending for education in the
poorest countries with the greatest need, and improve its focus on
quality and learning outcomes. It should relinquish its control of
the FTI, while strengthening its participation in the reformed
initiative as a key donor partner.
- Developing country governments should continue to prioritize
basic education by increasing the proportion of national resources
spent on education and improving the quality of their educational
systems.
- All partners should ensure meaningful civil society involvement
and input from the beginning of the process, and include broad
participation from both the South and the North.
AfricaFocus Bulletin is an independent electronic publication
providing reposted commentary and analysis on African issues, with
a particular focus on U.S. and international policies. AfricaFocus
Bulletin is edited by William Minter.
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