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The World Bank says only $249 is spent on each primary school student in Bangladesh,
which is the second lowest in South Asia
Expenditure on primary school students in Bangladesh is 72.1 percent less than the average
expenditure in South Asia and 70.1 percent less than the average in lower-middle income
countries, says a report of the World Bank.
Due to the negligible allocation in primary education, the quality of education is poor in
Bangladesh. It also results in a high rate of poverty in education in the country.
The World Bank measures "Learning Poverty" by considering the inability to read and
understand a short, age-appropriate text by age 10. In Bangladesh, the rate is 57 percent,
despite the enrolment of about 98 percent of children in primary schools.
The World Bank has recently published a report, "An Early-Warning Indicator for The Human
Capital Project", which indicates a learning poverty 35.2 percentage points higher than the
income poverty level in Bangladesh.
According to the report, only $249 (Purchasing Power Parity or PPP) is spent on each primary
school student in Bangladesh, which is the lowest among South Asian countries, barring
Afghanistan.
Purchasing power parity indicates a capacity to buy goods and services in several countries
with local currency compared to the US dollar.
The report notes that expenditure for each student at the primary level in Sri Lanka is $1,474,
which is nearly six times the amount spent in Bangladesh.
India spends three times more than Bangladesh – about $624 – on each primary student.
Per head expenditure for a primary school student in Pakistan is $467, about 87.55 percent
higher than that of Bangladesh.
Afghanistan spends $196 for each primary level student which is lower than Bangladesh and
the lowest in this region.
Due to the lower investment in primary education, Bangladesh achieved 0.48 points in 1 in the
Human Capital Index, which is substantially lower than that of Sri Lanka (0.58).
The World Bank's report states that 57 percent of children in Bangladesh at the late primary age
are not proficient in reading.
About 5 percent of primary school-aged children are not enrolled in school, says the report.
Based on a learning assessment, the World Bank says, about 55 percent of students in
Bangladesh do not achieve the minimum proficiency level at the end of primary school.
Referring to reading skills as a gateway to learning, the report says that all children should be
able to read by age 10, and although it is possible to learn later in life with enough effort,
children who cannot read by the end of primary school usually fail to master reading skills later.
Although the majority of children around the world are in school, in recent years a large portion
of them have failed to acquire fundamental skills, with many of them not learning to read
proficiently.
Moreover, 260 million children around the world do not attend school. This factor points to a
learning crisis threatening the efforts of the countries they inhabit to build human capital and
achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
"Without foundational learning, students often fail to thrive later in school or when they join the
workforce," the report warns.
The report says only 49 percent of Bangladeshi students aged between 7 and 14 years have
basic reading and number skills, and only 3.7 percent of these students have three or more
books other than textbooks at home.
The report also states that less than 19 percent of children aged below 5 in Bangladesh
attended school and only 61.4 percent of children enrolled in primary school at age 5 in 2019.
Although 98 percent of children in Bangladesh enroll in primary schools and only 86 percent of
them attend classes regularly, while 6.4 percent drop out of school later. Currently, only 82.6
percent of children complete primary level education, with 89.5 percent of them moving on to
high school.
In his view, "Enrolment in pre-primary education is now below 20 percent, which is why students
in primary schools have a serious lacking in preparedness."
Identifying public examinations as a major hurdle in the way of quality education at an early
stage, he recommended introducing a classroom-based assessment system.
Abdul Awal, chairperson of Sushasoner Jonno Procharabhijan or SUPRO (Campaign for Good
Governance), told The Business Standard, "Historically, allocation for education at any level in
Bangladesh has always been very low."
He said about 2 percent of the country's gross domestic product (GDP) is spent on education,
while the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco)
recommends allocating 6 percent of GDP for education.
"The actual amount spent on education will appear less if the calculation excludes educational
expenses of the Cantonment Board and various government institutions," he added
Abdul Awal also emphasized ensuring quality and transparency in education expenditure.
"The primary school is the place to develop the foundations of human capital, and education at
the upper level cannot fill the gap of primary education," said Dr Mustafa K Mujeri, former
Director General of the Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies.
He told The Business Standard that low investment in primary education is the main reason
behind the low quality of human resource, which has an inverse impact on productivity,
employment and income.
"From the early 1990s, the government has been implementing massive programmes to expand
primary education and enrol all children in educational institutions, but there was no significant
initiative to improve the quality of education," said the researcher.
Dr Mujeri drew attention to the fact that about 90 percent of the investment in the primary
education sector was spent on salaries and construction. The government should invest more to
improve the quality of education in addition to the money spent on salaries and construction, he
argued.