24.08.2013 Views

Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia - Ethiomedia

Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia - Ethiomedia

Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia - Ethiomedia

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Education Sector <strong>Corruption</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Ethiopia</strong> 77<br />

Address<strong>in</strong>g Quality, Capacity, and Resource Gaps<br />

Despite rapid expansion, <strong>Ethiopia</strong>’s education sector faces four key<br />

challenges:<br />

Access. Access to educational opportunities cont<strong>in</strong>ues to be an obstacle,<br />

especially for females and other “most vulnerable children,” poor<br />

students, and those <strong>in</strong> rural areas.<br />

Quality. Improved access has not been accompanied by adequate<br />

improvements <strong>in</strong> quality.<br />

F<strong>in</strong>anc<strong>in</strong>g. The rapid expansion has left a considerable f<strong>in</strong>anc<strong>in</strong>g gap<br />

between available funds and the anticipated cost of <strong>in</strong>vestments needed<br />

to improve and ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> quality.<br />

Capacity. Some of the regional and woreda governments lack the capacity<br />

to adequately plan, manage, and monitor the sector. This <strong>in</strong>cludes<br />

the capacity to gather and report on key performance <strong>in</strong>dicators on<br />

time to manage and monitor effectively the implementation of education<br />

reforms.<br />

<strong>Ethiopia</strong> is currently implement<strong>in</strong>g its second poverty reduction strategy,<br />

known as the Plan for Accelerated and Susta<strong>in</strong>ed Development to<br />

End Poverty (PASDEP). PASDEP shows a strong vertical coord<strong>in</strong>ation of<br />

sectoral strategies with the overall government strategy and is well <strong>in</strong>tegrated<br />

with the budget through the Macroeconomic and Fiscal Framework<br />

and the government-donor Jo<strong>in</strong>t Budget and Aid Review. PASDEP’s strategic<br />

vision is one of rapid and susta<strong>in</strong>ed growth, be<strong>in</strong>g achieved primarily<br />

through scaled-up development assistance and large domestic <strong>in</strong>vestments<br />

targeted at elim<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g the poverty traps that have h<strong>in</strong>dered the<br />

development of the country.<br />

The government’s current vision for education development is<br />

described <strong>in</strong> PASDEP. Although education rema<strong>in</strong>s a high priority, it is<br />

evident from PASDEP that education has been receiv<strong>in</strong>g a smaller<br />

share of the overall budget, the decl<strong>in</strong>e start<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> 2004/05 (MOFED<br />

2006). The overarch<strong>in</strong>g framework for education provision is the<br />

ESDP. Currently <strong>in</strong> its third phase (ESDP III), this gives high priority<br />

to quality improvement at all levels and to an <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly important<br />

role for the private sector <strong>in</strong> educational provision at all levels. Some<br />

observers have noted, however, that PASDEP does not <strong>in</strong>clude policy<br />

proposals which, by ensur<strong>in</strong>g a level play<strong>in</strong>g field, would permit the<br />

private sector to enter the market with confidence (Austrian<br />

Development Cooperation 2007).

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!