Publication

Oct 2011

A large empirical literature has shown that user fees signicantly deter public service utilization in developing countries. While most of these results reflect partial equilibrium analysis, the authors find that the nationwide abolition of public school fees in Kenya in 2003 led to no increase in net public enrollment rates, but rather a dramatic shift toward private schooling. Results suggest this divergence between partial- and general-equilibrium effects is partially explained by social interactions: the entry of poorer pupils into free education contributed to the exit of their more affluent peers.

Download English (PDF, 28 pages, 560 KB)
Author Tessa Bold, Mwangi Kimenyi, Germano Mwabu, Justin Sandefur
Series CGD Working Papers
Issue 271
Publisher Center for Global Development (CGD)
Copyright © 2011 Center for Global Development (CGD)
JavaScript has been disabled in your browser