ľ¹ÏÓ°Ôº

Skip to Main Navigation
publicationOctober 31, 2024

Education Finance Watch 2024

Students participate in class at school in Dhaka, Bangladesh

Students participate in class while listing to class teacher at the Sujat Nagar urban slum school in Dhaka, Bangladesh.  Photo: ? Dominic Chavez/World Bank

  • Image
    Oct 31, 2024

  • Image
    Feb 18, 2024

  • Image
    Oct 10, 2023

The latest from the World Bank and UNESCO shows that during the last decade, total education spending by governments, households and donors globally has increased steadily. However, this rise has not led to major increases in allocations per child, especially in poorer countries with growing populations. Globally, total education spending per child has either decreased or stagnated.

Key Findings:

  1. Spending is rising, but it is still not enough to address the learning crisis, especially in low-income countries:
    Global education spending has been on an upward trajectory over the past decade, signaling strong commitment from governments. However, in many low-income countries, even those that have reached the recommended education spending targets for their Gross Domestic Product (GDP) level, absolute levels of funding remain too low to guarantee adequate student learning. 
  2. Spending more is not enough without attention to efficiency and equity:
    To improve educational outcomes, governments must spend more efficiently in ways that differ depending on context. But the building blocks are the same everywhere: enhancing public financial management to allocate resources to the most cost-effective programs; promptly addressing local needs; and improving school management to optimize teacher performance and the best possible use of available resources. 
  3. While the absolute amount of education aid is high, its proportion of total development aid has declined
    The share of total development aid allocated to education fell from 9.3% in 2019 to 7.6% in 2022, reflecting donors¡¯ shift in funding priorities to energy, support for Ukraine, and health care in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. 
  4. Debt is putting a strain on education
    Some low and lower middle-income countries allocate nearly the same per capita resources to debt servicing as they do to education. Innovative financing mechanisms can be leveraged for short-term relief. 
  5. We need more and better data reporting:
    Disaggregated data by expenditure type or education level would be useful, as well as tracking household out-of-pocket education expenditures.

The Education Finance Watch report shines a light on the state of education financing, so that countries, donors, partners, and communities can take informed action. Since 2021, this collaboration between the World Bank (WB), the and the has tracked trends in education spending, examining how much countries invest in education and how these investments align with their development needs, particularly in low- and middle-income countries, which face the most severe challenges. The EFW uses various sources of education, economic, and financial data from the WB, UIS, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

Explore Prior Education Finance Watch Reports from 2021 - 2023