Public expenditure tracking surveys (PETS) allow policy makers to diagnose how incentives and accountability systems are working in practice and how they can be improved. Among the results provided by PETS are estimates of leakage, data on the percentage of funds spent at each level of the education hierarchy, descriptions of how funding is targeted among different schools and subpopulations, information on school facilities, teacher quality and absenteeism, school governance and accountability. This book provides three examples of 'good practice' in using PETS to improve transparency and accountability in managing education resources, and describes the approaches to be used in carrying out the surveys. It presents the experiences of Peru, Uganda and Zambia and underlines the importance of sharing the information generated to create incentives for making education systems more efficient. As the experience of Uganda shows, it was possible to reduce the rate of leakage of non-salary expenditures drastically thanks to an information campaign based on a PETS.
Año de publicación
2004
Lugar de publicación
Paris
Páginas
136
Editor
UNESCO, IIEP
Serie
Ethics and corruption in education
ISBN
92-803-1257-X (en); 978-92-803-2257-6 (fr)
Idioma
English
French
Region/País
Agrupaciones lingüísticas
Tipo de recurso