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SHAPING THE FUTURE HOW CHANGING DEMOGRAPHICS CAN POWER HUMAN DEVELOPMENT

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LAYING A FOUNDATION FOR LIFE:<br />

PRE-PRIMARY SCHOOL<br />

Pre-primary education for children from age<br />

three to the official primary school entry age<br />

plays a critical role at a time when children’s<br />

brains are rapidly developing. Children become<br />

more independent and confident, and are likely<br />

to perform better throughout the course of their<br />

education and in employment. 7 A recent study by<br />

the United Nations Educational, Scientific and<br />

Cultural Organization (UNESCO) found that<br />

in 58 out of 65 countries, 15-year-old students<br />

who attended at least a year of pre-primary<br />

school outperformed students who did not, even<br />

after allowing for differences in socioeconomic<br />

background. 8<br />

Globally, pre-primary education has expanded<br />

from 112 million children in 1999 to<br />

184 million in 2013, equivalent to an increase<br />

in the gross enrolment ratio from 33 percent to<br />

54 percent (Table 3.1). Across Asia-Pacific, the<br />

rate of progress has been uneven, with relatively<br />

faster progress in East Asia and Oceania. While<br />

the enrolment rate has more than doubled or<br />

almost doubled in many countries, over half of<br />

TABLE 3.1:<br />

Progress on pre-primary education has been mixed<br />

young children in about a third of the region’s<br />

countries still do not receive pre-primary education<br />

(Annex Table 16).<br />

Bhutan, Cambodia, Fiji and Timor-Leste<br />

had pre-primary enrolment rates below 20 percent<br />

in 2013. At the opposite end of the spectrum,<br />

Viet Nam achieved an 81 percent share, while<br />

Australia; Hong Kong, China (SAR); Papua<br />

New Guinea and Thailand had attained 100<br />

percent (Annex Table 16).<br />

Rural-urban and other geographical disparities<br />

are noticeable in many countries, since<br />

governments generally have yet to assume sufficient<br />

responsibility for pre-primary education.<br />

The cost of private provision contributes in<br />

large part to major disparities between the<br />

richest and poorest children. In Indonesia, 99<br />

percent of kindergartens are privately run, likely<br />

accounting for huge variations in enrolment<br />

rates across provinces. 9 Some middle-income<br />

countries have lower participation than poor<br />

countries—in 2013, the Islamic Republic of<br />

Iran sent 42 percent of children to pre-primary<br />

education, compared with 85 percent in Nepal, 10<br />

suggesting a strong policy commitment and<br />

state support in the latter.<br />

Enrolment in<br />

pre-primary school<br />

varies regionally,<br />

due to cost and<br />

policy preferences<br />

Source: UNESCO Institute for Statistics 2015.<br />

85

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