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Educational inequality in Mozambique

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Abstract

In very poor countries, inequality often means that a small part of the population maintains living standards far above the rest. This is also true for educational inequality in Mozambique: only a small segment of the population has access to higher levels of education (there are 30 times as many schools offering grade 1 than grade 12) and receives education of a good quality. This study investigates inequality in past attainment, in current school access, and learning or educational quality, by gender, geography and parental socio-economic status. Survey and census data measure attainment and access, while a grade-3 Portuguese test and 2007 SACMEQ tests measure quality. While the gender gap in access has been closed, large geographical and wealth inequalities remain. The South—particularly Maputo City—is far better served than other regions or provinces, while richer children remain in school longer. The overall weakness of the school system limits its ability to overcome these inequalities.

Author
Van der Berg, Servaas
Da Maia, Carlos
Burger, Cobus
Corporate Author
United Nations University. World Institute for Development Economics Research(UNU)-WIDER
Year of publication
2017
Imprint
Helsinki (UNU-WIDER, 2017, p.28)
Country (Geographical area)
ISBN
978- 92-9256-438-4
Source database
curatED
Language