Gender equity and fee-free basic education in Tanzania

Resource type
Report
Authors/contributors
Title
Gender equity and fee-free basic education in Tanzania
Abstract
Samer Al-Samarrai, Marie Evane Tamagnan1 Introduced in 2016, the Fee-Free Basic Education Program (FBEP) is the government’s flagship policy to expand equitable access to basic education. Evidence shows that policies of this kind increase educational access and lead to significant economic and social benefits. In Ghana, children that received fee-free education were much more likely to complete secondary school and had much higher earnings than children that were not part of the program. In Tanzania, similar benefits to FBEP are possible since the labor market returns to secondary schooling are high.
Place
Washington D.C.
Institution
Education Global Practice, Africa Region, World Ban
Date
2019
Pages
29
Language
en
Library Catalogue
Zotero
Citation
Al-Samarrai, S., & Tamagnan, M. E. (2019). Gender equity and fee-free basic education in Tanzania (p. 29). Education Global Practice, Africa Region, World Ban. http://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/356111553606355438/pdf/Gender-Equity-and-Fee-Free-Basic-Education-in-Tanzania.pdf