Sector Assistance Program Evaluation on Education in Uzbekistan
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- Sustainable financing outcome.
Employment outcomes.
The slow growth of employment opportunities (at about 2.1% per annum, compared with the more than 3% increase in labor entrants) continues to be a major 21 challenge for the education sector. Apart from agriculture, Uzbekistan “has a potential comparative advantage in labor-intensive light manufacturing, but realizing it will depend upon reducing pervasive state involvement and allowing truly private enterprises to compete on a level playing field. Presently, this is a ‘binding constraint’ in Uzbekistan. In services, skills-based subsectors could be facilitated by a better fit between the education system and labor market needs, and by a well-functioning ICT environment” (CSP, 2006, p. 4, para. 9). However, education sector investments have yet to demonstrate external efficiency. The RRPs of SSE and ESDP identified the significance of an education–employment interface and emphasized the need to generate marketable skills in Uzbekistan. However, the implementation of these loans, as noted in the 2006 CSP, did not lead to much improvement in this area. Education– employment links have much more relevance to the graduates of the SSE system, as they are the new entrants. Therefore, the inability to effect transformation in SSE is likely to delay any improvement in the job market of the school graduates. 43 More emphasis on SSE, especially its assessment of competency levels, examinations, and certifications, is urgent if the education sector has to serve as a conduit to gainful employment, particularly in the private sector. PPP is the preferred modality for support in these areas. 66. Sustainable financing outcome. Uzbekistan is spending 8%–9% of its GDP on the education sector. These investments come from its own financial resources, as well as from concessional and non-concessional loans. While this is a clear indication of the priority to support human capital formation, it could be unsustainable in the medium-to-long term. It is the cost–benefit analysis (including supply and demand assessments) that should determine the level of total education expenditure, and how it should be split between the public budget and private sources. Some of these public investments and fiscal reforms in the education sector are still to be fleshed out. Cost recovery is low. A detailed financial analysis of the education sector is required, not only for the sake of its proper development, but for apportioning the limited amount of public expenditure across the other public services such as water, nutrition, health, housing, etc. Such an analysis of education expenditure is part of the medium-term expenditure framework (MTEF). These frameworks are instrumental not only for the optimal allocation of resources for services, but also to protect these allocations when faced with macroeconomic volatility. In other words, it is this sustainability that is the main justification for an MTEF to ensure adequate investments in the medium-to-long term. Download 402.67 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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