ABSTRACT
This
research work was conducted to examine the Respondents’ responses on the
assessment of the relationship between educational funding and Economic Growth
in Nigeria. The survey research design was used in carrying out the study since
it required the collection of data from a large number of respondents within
the limited time scheduled for the completion of the project. Relevant research
questions to show the findings of the study. A questionnaire was designed by
the researcher and validated by the supervisor which was administered to the
respondents for the generation of data. However, a total number of 100
respondents comprising male and female staff and non teaching staff were
selected through simple random sampling method to generate the sample size. The
sample size was considered adequate and representative because, all the
respondents were people of the same profession and had similar orientation,
though they were drawn from different department and faculties. The analysis of
the data collected from respondents was carried out with the use of percentage
and frequency distribution tables. In line with the findings made from this
investigation. It is recommends that adequate funding for the
provision/upgrading of necessary teaching aids, laboratory materials and other
tools. In terms of teaching methods and improvement; steps should be
taken for continuous teaching methods review/improvement to make the teaching
methods current and relevant to contemporary needs.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Title
page i
Certification ii
Dedication iii
Acknowledgement iv
Abstract v
Table
of
content vi
CHAPTER
ONE - INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background
to the Study
1.2 Statement
of the Problem
1.3 Purpose
of the Study
1.4 Significance
of the Study
1.5 Research
Question
1.6 Scope
and Limitation of the Study
1.7 Definition
of Terms
CHAPTER
TWO - LITERATURE
REVIEW
2.1 Conceptual Perspectives
2.2 Secondary Educational
Expenditure
2.3 Issues
of Funding Education in Nigeria
2.4 Secondary
Education Reform Agenda.
2.5 Funding
formula Options
2.6 Funding
Model of Secondary Education in Nigeria.
2.7 Impact
of the Funding Secondary School
2.8 Benefits
of Education
2.9 Cost
of Education
2.10 Formula
Funding Criteria for sustainable Funding of
Nigeria Secondary Education
2.11 Problems in
the Secondary School System in Nigeria
2.12 Teacher
Training
2.13 Summary of the
Review
CHAPTER
THREE - RESEARCH
METHODOLOGY
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Research
Design
3.3 Population
of Study
3.4 Sample
size and Sampling Technique
3.5 Research Instrument
3.6 Validity
of the Instruments
3.7 Reliability
of the Instrument
3.8 Procedure
for Data Collection
3.9 Data
Analysis
CHAPTER
FOUR - DATA
PRESENTATION, ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION
OF FINDINGS
4.0 Introduction
4.1 Data
Presentation and Analysis
CHAPTER
FIVE - SUMMARY,
CONCLUSION
AND RECOMMENDATIONS
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Summary
of the Study
5.3 Conclusion
5.4 Recommendations
References
Questionnaire
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background
to the Study
The
researcher considers the relation that is established between education and
economic growth in Nigeria. Education, as a key
component of human capital formation is recognized as being vital in increasing
the productive capacity of people. Education, especially at the higher level,
contributes directly to economic growth by making individual workers more
productive and leading to the creation of knowledge, ideas, and technological
innovation (Odeleye, 2012).
The effect of education on technological innovation is direct
following the Romer/Solow growth theory framework. An investment in education
is beneficial to the society, both at micro and macro levels and affects the
system both directly and indirectly. Education is basic to development and is
also regarded as an instrument through which the society can be transformed. As
a salient factor in transition programme, education equips human resources with
the needed knowledge, skills and competencies, which would make them
functional, and contribute to the all-round development of the nation. It does
not only help to supply the essential human capital which is a necessary
condition for sustainable economic growth but it is also a key to poverty
reduction and a major vehicle for promoting equity, fairness and social justice
(Todaro, 2007).
Education
is seen here as representing one of the primary components of human capital
formation, which is an important factor in modelling the endogenous growth.
Human capital is essentially important in achieving a sustainable economic
growth; however, the greatest contribution is accomplished through investment
in the quality and quantity of education.
Economists,
since the time of Adam Smith and David Ricardo have been interested in the
issue of economic growth and its causes. It was not until the 1950s and 1960s,
however, that the first set of theories of economic growth were formalised.
These early theories, known as the neoclassical approach to growth theory, had
a number of weaknesses. One of the key ones was that they assumed that
technological change (and hence productivity growth) was driven entirely by
factors beyond our control. Clearly, these models did not provide a good
representation of the real world. Beginning in the 1980s, a series of more
sophisticated models appeared based on so called New Growth theories. These
models are not uniform. One strand emphasis the stock of human capital as an
important determinant of economic growth. A second strand places more emphasis
on the incentives that firms have to generate new ideas. Without going into
technical detail, Kerr (2001) identified a couple of points worth noting up
front:
Firstly,
specifically recognized that the growth rate of the economy is not driven
solely by outside factors; and second, shown that government policies have an
important role to play in determining the long- run growth rate of a country's
economy.
These
models are clearly more realistic in their portrayal of the economy with
consumers, firms and governments all having an impact. They also provide a much
more useful benchmark for thinking about the role of education in economic
growth and the design of education policies. In these recent models, unlike the
earlier ones, education is seen as contributing to economic growth in two ways:
It
directly affects economic growth by making individual workers more productive;
and indirectly affects economic growth by leading to the creation of knowledge,
ideas and technological innovation – either through the process of acquiring
education itself or because education is a key input into the development of a
research sector that produces new knowledge and ideas.
Education
is important not only because educated people engage in university research.
Education is also important because it generates new ideas in the private
sector. Knowledge creation is not a monopoly of either the public or private
sectors. A number of studies have confirmed the importance of education in
explaining growth. The consensus view on the direct effects of education is
that the private rate of return to an individual from an additional year of
schooling is anywhere from 5 to 15 percent. This must, to some extent, reflect
the fact that employers see educated workers as more productive.
Similarly,
Odeleye, (2012) find that increases in educational attainment account for
around 20 percent of growth in output per worker. Education also has indirect
effects and studies have shown that higher levels of human capital are
associated with significantly larger physical investments, higher rates of technology
transfer and longer life expectancy. However, remains to be done in measuring
the exact impact of education on economic growth.
Education
is the most important instrument to enhance human capabilities and to achieve
the desired objectives of socio and economic development. Education enables
individuals to make informed choices, broaden their horizons and opportunities
and to have a voice in public decision making. At the macro level, education
means strong and sustainable economic growth due to productive and skilled
labour force. At the micro level however, education is strongly correlated to
higher income generating opportunities and a more informed and aware existence.
Emerging globalisation offers immense opportunities and challenges in a competitive
environment, and only those nations can benefit from it, which has acquired the
required knowledge base and skills. (Akram, 2007). It is typically
on this basis that governments expend substantial amount of money in the
financing of education with or without considering the economic returns to such
investment.
Human
capital is a broad and multifaceted concept encompassing many different types
of investment in people. Health and nutrition are certainly an important aspect
of such investment, particularly in developing countries where deficiencies in
these respects may severely limit the population's ability to engage in
productive activities. In advanced countries, however, the key aspect of human
capital has to do with the cognitive and non-cognitive abilities that are
acquired at home, in the work place and in formal and informal training and are
useful in the production of goods, services and further knowledge (Fuente,
2006). Human resource development relates to the education, training and utilisation
of human potentials for social and economic progress. Hallak, 1990 identified
five energy boost of human resource development: education; health and
nutrition; the environment; employment; and political and economic freedom.
These energisers are interlinked and interdependent, but education is the basis
of all the others, an essential factor in the improvement of health and
nutrition, for maintaining a high- quality environment, for expanding and
improving labour pools, and for sustaining political and economic
responsibility.
For
the attainment of economic growth and development in an economy, there is a
serious need to develop human resources in that economy. Schultz (1961) as
quoted in Adamu (2003) identified five ways of developing human resources, out
of these, education of different form accounted for the highest number of ways
of developing human resources.
Investment
in health facilities and services, broadly conceived to include all
expenditures that affect the life expectancy, strength and stamina, and the
vigour and vitality of the people. On-the-job training, old-type
apprenticeships organized by firms. Formally organised education at the
elementary, secondary and higher levels. Study programme for adults that are
not organized by firms, including extension programmes notably in agriculture,
Migration of individuals and families to adjust to changing job opportunities.
Human capital is a broad and multifaceted concept encompassing many different
types of investment in people. Health and nutrition are certainly an important
aspect of such investment, particularly in developing countries where
deficiencies in these respects may severely limit the population's ability to
engage in productive activities.
There
are good reasons to expect that human capital should be an important
determinant of productivity, both at the individual and at the aggregate level,
and that its role should be particularly crucial in today's globalized
knowledge economy. Workers with greater problem-solving and communications
abilities should perform better than their less skilled counterparts at any
task that requires more than the routine application of physical labour and
will also learn faster and adapt better to changing circumstances. Hence,
skilled workers can be expected to be more productive than unskilled ones for
any given production process, and should be able to operate more sophisticated
technologies that place greater demands on their capacities. If skill does
carry with it a greater ability to learn, produce new knowledge and adapt to
change, moreover, a more educated labour force will also be able to achieve
faster productivity growth, both through gradual improvements in existing
production processes and through the adoption and development of more advanced
technologies, and should be in a better position to respond flexibly to rising
worldwide
competition. These
considerations suggest that the importance of human capital as an input has grown
over time as production processes have become increasingly knowledge intensive
and footloose.
Today,
relatively few occupations involve only mechanical physical tasks, and a large
and growing fraction of jobs either reduce to the processing of information or
require the application of specialized knowledge and skills to the production
of increasingly sophisticated goods and services. Education remains the most
effective instrument through which the society can be transformed. The extent
to which a country invests in education, among other sectors, will determine
the level and rate of its transformation. Education does not only make use of
physical materials but also human resources to make up for the resources needed
for transformation. As a stringent and unique factor in transition programmes,
education equips human resources with the needed knowledge, skills and
competencies which would make them functional, and contribute to the all round
development of the nation.
The
structure of the formal education consists of six years primary education,
three years of junior secondary, three years of senior secondary education and
four years at the tertiary school (the 6-3-3-4 system). This replaced the old
system of 6-5-2-4 system inherited from the colonial masters in 1984. The
attendance of primary and junior secondary schools, which is also called basic
education, is compulsory and free. However, in practice, basic education is not
truly free because all schools collect obligatory contributions from students
to supplement the government subsidies. The collection of fees is mainly
feasible in secondary and post secondary levels. At the secondary level, it
came as a disguise of Parents Teachers Association (PTA) fees, Development
fees, Computer fees to mention but a few. At the post secondary levels however,
it is broadly called school fees. Although both the local and state governments
mainly finance basic education, there are also a significant number of private
schools, especially at the primary and JSS levels. However, higher education is
composed of three levels namely collegiate from colleges of educations,
diplomas from Polytechnics and degrees from Universities in various
disciplines. In addition, the University degrees are in three phases, they are
bachelors, masters and doctorate degrees in various areas.
The
National Policy on Education assured nine years of free and compulsory basic
education for all Nigerian children. The scheme failed for inadequate planning
and lack of resources, but resulted in doubling primary education enrolment in
a decade. The new democratic Government responded to the crisis in the
education sector with the launch of Universal Basic Education (UBE) in 1999,
but it was not passed into law until 2003. Not unlike the defunct UPE, emerging
statistics show evidence of an increase in enrolment.
Some
tiers of government capitalize on the aspect of the UBE law that gives a grace
period of five years before the full implementation of the bill, to charge
fees. Also interestingly, since Nigeria operates a federal system of
government, the state government owned the UBE and Child Rights Act, passed in
the federal legislative house, do not bind schools. As a signatory to the 2000
World Education Conference, and the 6 Dakar Goals towards achieving Education
for All (EFA), Government has also established a National EFA Coordination unit
under the Federal Ministry of Education mandated to prepare a National Action
Plan for the delivery of EFA in Nigeria. Perhaps the greatest challenge facing
government is the inadequate spending on education. The Federal Government also
established the Education Trust Fund (ETF) with the aim of assisting the
education sector. However, as at April 2009 about ₦22.6 billion Education Trust
Fund money lies unutilized in the Central Bank of Nigeria1. The scenario is
dismay in the face of glaring financial inadequacies due to serious under
funding, poor or/and dilapidated facilities and other degrading features in
education, sector. Nonetheless, the ETF still assist largely in rebuilding the
already dilapidated education sector.
1.2 Statement
of the Problem
Of
all the problems plaguing schools in Nigeria today, the financial state of the
schools is the key focal point of interest to the nation and administration in
process of attaining the goals of education.
The
main problem faced by governments is allocating scarce resources across
competing activities and sectors. The choice between alternative investments
such as investment in education versus investment in physical infrastructure
depends on society's objectives, which are represented by governmental
decisions, and on the analysis between costs of the investment versus the
future benefit to be derived from that investment. Since economists see
education as an investment, therefore, it is important to estimate its
contribution to economic growth and/or its rate of return. Education represents
both consumption and investment items in an economy. Education is valued for
its immediate as well as its future benefits. This means that the distribution
of educational investment affects future income distribution, thus, equity
plays an important role in educational investment decisions. Different
societies give different weight between the objectives of efficiency and equity
in defining an educational investment. In general, centrally planned economies
placed a higher weight on equity grounds in defining their educational policy
investment than capitalist economies (Manuel Madrid-Aris, 2000).
Inadequate
funding of schools has had a lot of effects on the schools and education as a
whole which include fall in the standard of education, indiscipline,
examination malpractice, secret cults, and teachers’ commitment to their job,
bribery and corruption in the school to mention few. All these shall be looked
at as the research work continues. In view of this study aims at finding out
how educational funding can promote economic
growth in Nigeria.
1.3 Purpose
of the Study
The
main purpose of this study is to carry out an assessment of the relationship
between educational funding and economic growth in Nigeria.
Other
purpose of study include the following:
i. To
determine the relationship between educations and
economic growth in Nigeria
ii. To
examine how inadequacy of funding affects secondary school effectiveness.
iii. To
find out government’s provision of instructional materials for teachers.
iv. To
investigate the effects of inadequate funding on teachers commitment to their
duties.
v. To
examine the extent to which lack of funding has affect the standard of
education.
1.4 Significance
of the Study
The
study would help to update information about the effect of funding in the
secondary schools, adequacy and their relationship to education growth.
The
information thus discovered would be an eye-opener to the parents and guardian
on the effects of funding on secondary school effectiveness.
It
would help to improve the quality of education in the state and it is hoped
that the funding would further reveal more areas for possible research studies.
It
is hoped that the result of this study will undoubtedly fully be valuable for
teachers, administrators and the government because it would expose and also
provide them with useful information on the area in which effect of funds on
secondary school effectiveness.
1.5 Research
Question
The
study intends to provide answers to the following questions:
i. Is
there any relationship between educations and economic growth in
Nigeria?
ii. To
what extent does inadequacy of funding on education lead to secondary school
effectiveness?
iii. Does
the government provide enough instructional materials for the teachers?
iv. Is
inadequate funding of education by government responsible for teachers less
commitment to their duties?
v. To
what extent does lack of funding affect standard of education?
1.6 Scope
and Limitation of the Study
This
study is limited to Lagos State. It does not intend to go beyond this zone
because of financial and time constraint.
1.7 Definition
of Terms
Effective:
Producing the result that was wanted or intended, impressive or interesting
enough to notice.
Fund:
Amount of money that has been made available for a particular purpose.
Secondary
School: It is the post-primary institutions where students are
prepared for the West African School Certificate (WASC) Examination for a
minimum period of six years.
Teaching:
it is the act of engaging in interactive behaviour with one or more students
for the purpose of affecting a change in the students attitudinal, cognitive or
psychomotor thereby promoting the psycho-social development and growth of the
students.
Learning:
Is a relatively permanent change in an individual’s behaviour as a result of
experience of training.
Academic
Performance: This is how well or how bad an educational work or
activity is done.
TOPIC: AN
ASSESSMENT OF THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EDUCATIONAL FUNDING AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
IN NIGERIA
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 65
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