Abstract
We evaluate the impact of the Gambian hardship allowance, which provides a salary premium of 30-40% to primary school teachers in remote locations, on the distribution and characteristics of teachers across schools. A geographic discontinuity in the policy's implementation and the presence of common pre-treatment trends between hardship and non-hardship schools provide sources of identifying variation. We find that the hardship allowance increased the share of qualified (certified) teachers by 10 percentage points. The policy also reduced the pupil-qualified teacher ratio by 27, or 61% of the mean, in recipient schools close to the distance threshold. Further analysis suggests that these gains were not merely the result of teachers switching from non-hardship to hardship schools. With similar policies in place in more than two dozen other developing countries, our study provides an important piece of evidence on their effectiveness.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 120-136 |
| Number of pages | 17 |
| Journal | Economics of Education Review |
| Volume | 41 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Aug 2014 |
Keywords
- Gambia
- Program evaluation
- Regression discontinuity
- Rural schools
- Teacher labor markets
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