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Inputs, incentives, and complementarities in education: experimental evidence from Tanzania

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Abstract

We present results from a large-scale randomized experiment across 350 schools in Tanzania that studied the impact of providing schools with (i) unconditional grants, (ii) teacher incentives based on student performance, and (iii) both of the above. After two years, we find (i) no impact on student test scores from providing school grants, (ii) some evidence of positive effects from teacher incentives, and (iii) significant positive effects from providing both programs. Most important, we find strong evidence of complementarities between the programs, with the effect of joint provision being significantly greater than the sum of the individual effects. Our results suggest that combining spending on school inputs (the default policy) with improved teacher incentives could substantially increase the cost-effectiveness of public spending on education. This article in the Quarterly Journal of Economics has been also published as NBER working paper in 2018.

Author
Mbiti, Isaac
Muralidharan, Karthik
Romero, Mauricio
Schipper, Youdi
Manda, Constantine
Rajani, Rakesh
Year of publication
2019
Pages
0
Series
The Quarterly Journal of Economics
Linguistic region
Country (Geographical area)
Level of education
Source database
library
Language
Project
Conditional Cash Transfer, CCT