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Albert Hirschman's Exit-voice Framework and
its Relevance to Problems of Public EducationPerformance in Latin AmericaJonathan Di John
Published online: 04 Sep 2007.
To cite this article:Jonathan Di John (2007) Albert Hirschman's Exit-voice Framework and its Relevance to Problems of PubEducation Performance in Latin America, Oxford Development Studies, 35:3, 295-327
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Albert Hirschmans Exit-voice Frameworkand its Relevance to Problems of PublicEducation Performance in Latin America
JONATHAN DI JOHN*
ABSTRACT This paper applies Albert Hirschmans exit-voice framework to the problems ofeducation coverage and quality in Latin America. It argues that the combination of low directtaxation and high levels of private primary enrolment provides exit options for the wealthy andreduces their incentive to exercise their voice, or protest mechanisms, in the face of poor
education performance. It also argues that fragmented and clientelist political party structures limit
the provision and monitoring of public education, and also reduce the political capacity of the poorto exercise their voice regarding public education coverage and quality. The main policy implicationof the paper is that good governance in education cannot realistically be addressed without
analysing how the structure of power and voice, and of conflicts of interest within civil society, affectthe actual political pressures that state institutions face.
1. IntroductionIn the period 19702000, the coverage and quality of primary and secondary school public
education in Latin America was disappointing. Education indicators in the region lag
behind many East Asian and Eastern European economies despite similar per capita
incomes across the three regions. Moreover, within Latin America, Cuba stands out as thecountry with the best education system, despite having one of the lowest per capita
incomes in the region. In the literature that has explored Latin Americas poor education
performance, two types of explanations dominate. The first focuses on the identification of
a series of sub-optimal policies and institutions that result in inefficiencies in the use of
public resources, such as disproportionately high spending on higher education. A second
explanation stresses the role that high levels of income and asset inequality play, from both
the supply and demand side, in reducing human capital accumulation (Birdsall &
Londono, 1998; Mariscal & Sokoloff, 2000). While both of these explanations generate
important insights, they are subject to shortcomings. The first type of explanation fails to
ISSN 1360-0818 print/ISSN 1469-9966 online/07/030295-33
q 2007 International Development Centre, Oxford
DOI: 10.1080/13600810701514860
I would like to thank Francisco Gutierrez Sanin, Jo Beall, Rosemary Thorp, and Judith Tendler for helpful
comments on an earlier draft. I would also like to thank the Crisis States Programme, London School of
Economics for funding part of this research and my participation in the seminar: Development and Conflict: The
Ideas of Albert Hirschman, Bogota, Columbia, November, 2005. The usual disclaimers apply.
*Jonathan Di John University of London, School of Oriental and African Studies, Department of Development
Studies, Thrornhaugh Street, Russell Square, London WC1H 0XG. UK.
Oxford Development Studies,
Vol. 35, No. 3, September 2007
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elucidate why such policies and institutionspersist, or why decision-makers do not correct
such mistakes despite widespread knowledge of the relevant problems. The emphasis oninequality, meanwhile, cannot explain why students in all of the countries in the region,
apart from Cuba, under-perform despite the substantial variation in income inequality
across countries, or why students in countries with Latin American levels of income
distribution such as Malaysia do better in international tests.
This paper presents an alternative explanation for the persistence of sub-optimal
education policies, coverage and quality in Latin America. One factor that is not
adequately addressed in the literature is why interest group pressure from within civil
society and within political parties to improve education performance is so weak in many
(though not all) countries in the region. As many Latin American polities have shifted to
more democratic politics, the reasons behind the failure of civil society pressure
effectively to demand better public services, like education, provide a window into
understanding the political and institutional obstacles to achieving a more effective,developmental and just democracy overall.
I argue that revisiting and applying the insights of Albert Hirschmans exit-voice
framework provides important clues to the general problem of ineffective interest group
pressurevis-a-vispublic education in Latin America. The main argument of the paper is
that an important part of the problem is the absence ofincentivesfor upper-income groups
to exercise their considerable political power and voice, or protest mechanisms, to
demand improvements. I suggest that there are two reasons why upper-income groups may
have weak incentives to demand better public education. First, the generally higher supply
of private schooling in Latin America (compared with other middle-income countries in
East Asia and Eastern Europe) provides exit options for the upper-income groups to
send their children to private schools at the primary and secondary level; because upper-
income groups have options to use private services in education, they have a reduced need
to exercise their political voice in the context of deterioration in the quality and coverageof public education. As Hirschman (1970) argued, the greater use of exit options can
atrophy the development of voice.
Second, upper-income groups in the region pay negligible amounts of direct personal
and property taxes compared with middle-income countries in East Asia and Eastern
Europe. Direct taxation is an important nexus through which the state and upper-income
groups develop strong mutual obligations (Lieberman, 2002). In middle-income countries,
the top 10% of income earners are the main group that can potentially pay the bulk of
personal income and property tax. Low levels of direct personal income and property
taxation weaken the link between state and upper-income citizens and as a result further
reduce the incentives upper-income groups have to exercise voice over poor public service
provision.
The reason for examining the role of upper-income groups in Latin America is that their
economic and political powervis-a-visthe state is very strong in comparison with similargroups in many other middle-income countries. Evidence of this is not hard to find. First,
upper-income groups, particularly the top 10% of income earners, appropriate
extraordinarily high shares of national income in Latin America (Inter-American
Development Bank, 1998). Second, wealthy landowning elites there have been able to
resist any attempts at large-scale agrarian reform throughout the 20th Century. Third,
upper-income groups (as noted) pay very low levels of personal income tax in comparison
with those in middle-income countries in other regions. Since personal income tax is
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demand for private schools; higher personal income tax payments; effective political party
capacity to monitor public education; and insufficient household income to afford private
education in the absence of state subsidization of private education. The paper will address
the extent to which these propositions explain Latin Americas disappointing performance
in education coverage and quality relative to middle-income countries in East Asia and
Eastern Europe as well the extent to which it explains variations within education
performance across countries withinLatin America.
The paper suggests the following research questions that might emanate from an
application of Hirschmans exit-voice framework: What are the prospects of building
coalitionsbetween the poor and elites/non-poor groups, when the latter have the options to
useprivateservices (such as health, education, security), that is, exit from public service
use? Moreover, if elites/non-poor groups have the political clout to avoid paying direct
taxes, does this lessen even further their interest in public service delivery? Finally, howdoes the nature and structure of political parties within Latin America affect the
possibilities of organizing voice among the poor and of initiating pro-poor education
and tax reform? These questions are often avoided in discussions of good governance by
donors because they require the kinds of explicit political judgements that donors are
uncomfortable making.
Section 2 presents the deterioration in Latin Americas education performance in the
period 19702003. Section 3 critically examines some common diagnoses of the nature of
the problem. I find that the identification of policy and institutional failures is an
inadequate explanation of why theses sub-optimalities persist, especially since there is
widespread knowledge of the existence of more efficient and equitable alternatives.
Moreover, I find that the extent to which inequality negatively affects education coverage
and quality is subject to important qualifications. Section 4 presents and applies
Hirschmans exit-voice framework to the problem of public education delivery in theLatin American context. I argue that the combination of high levels of private education
options combined with low levels of direct (income and property) taxes lessens the
incentives elites have to use voice in the face of deteriorating public education quality.I also suggest that the existence of fragmented and clientelist political party structures
lowers the chance that alliances can be built to organize voice and thus pressure the state to
push for large-scale education reform. Section 5 considers the extent to which the
framework put forward accounts for variations in education performance within Latin
Table 1. Factors influencing the use of exit and voice options when public school quality declines
Exit options tend to increase with: Voice options tend to increase with:
1) greater state-funding of non-state schools(religious, private) which increases thesupply of non-state education andenables more households to afford privateeducation
1) lower state-funding of non-state schools(religious, private) which reduces the supplyof non-state education andlimits the numberof households that can afford privateeducation
2) lower personal income tax payments 2) higher personal income tax payments3) ineffective political party capacity to
monitor public education3) effective political party capacity to
monitor public education4) household income sufficient to afford
private education irrespectiveofstate-funding of non-state schools
4) household income insufficient to affordprivate education in the absenceofstate-funding of non-state schools
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America. Section 6 summarizes the results and provides some policy implications,
including an analysis of why vouchers to subsidize private education have haddisappointing results. The Conclusion provides theoretical and policy implications for
governance reforms more generally.
2. Latin American Education Performance in Comparative Perspective
The performance of the education system throughout Latin America has been
disappointing, particularly in the period 19702003 (Kaufman & Nelson, 2004b). This
is not to deny that progress has been made over a longer time period. In the period from the
end of World War II to the beginning of the 1980s, adult illiteracy in the region declined
from 34 to 13% (Puryear, 1997, p. 4). In comparative perspective, however, youth
illiteracy rates on average in Latin America still exceed any countries with similar and
even much lower per capita income levels, as indicated in Table 2.
In 2001, the average Latin American male youth illiteracy rate was 2.7% and the
average female youth illiteracy rate was 2.2%, compared with averages of 1.2 and 1.8%,
respectively, in East Asia, and averages below 0.5 and 0.5%, respectively, in Eastern
Europe. Brazil had the highest levels of youth illiteracy in Latin America. Cuba, China,
Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines, all with muchlowerincome per capita levels than
the Latin American average, had achieved by 2001 youth illiteracy rates similar to or
below the Latin American averages, as indicated in Table 2.Latin America has indeed made important strides in increasing the number of school
years attained. In the period 1980 2000, the mean years of education of the adult
population aged 25 and older went up by 1.7 years in Latin America (from 4.1 to 5.8 years)
(de Ferrantiet al., 2003, p. 3). However, since 1970, relative to its per capita income level,
Latin Americas performance in human capital accumulation has been weak compared to
other regions (Birdsall & Londono, 1998). Average school attainment in the 1990s wasnearly 2 years below what would have been expected given the regions average per capita
income. Latin American adults have 1.4 fewer years of education and East Asian adults
have 0.4 more years of education than would be expected from their income levels
(de Ferranti et al., 2003, p. 3).
The region has a particularly large deficit in enrolment in secondary education. Latin
America has an average deficit of approximately 20 percentage points in net secondary
enrolment and 10 percentage points in gross tertiary enrolment given its average income
level, while East Asia has surpluses of more than 17 and 15 percentage points, respectively
(de Ferrantiet al., 2003).2 Cross-country evidence suggests that within Latin America the
biggest deficits in secondary enrolment are found in Brazil (36 points), Venezuela
(42 points) and Costa Rica (24 points). In contrast, many of the countries in the English-
speaking Caribbean, including Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, have net secondary
enrolment rates that are substantially higher than expected for their income levels(de Ferranti et al., 2003, Fig. 2.2, p. 29).
One of the main sources of this deficit in secondary school enrolment is the high
repetition and drop-out rates in primary school. Repetition rates in primary and secondary
school are higher than would be expected for the regions per capita income (Kaufman &
Nelson, 2004c, p. 249). Latin America has by far the highest repetition and drop-out rates
when compared with East Asia and the transition economies in Eastern Europe. 3 Average
repetition rates in primary school in the region have improved from 16% in 1965 to 10% in
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1990. However, the 10% repetition rate was still over three times the rate in East Asia (3%)
and the centrally planned economies of Eastern Europe (3%). Average repetition rates in
secondary school in the region were lower over the same period (remaining at 8%), but
have not improved over time. In 1990, average repetition rates in secondary school in
Latin America (8%) were double the rates in East Asia (4%) and four times the ratesin Eastern Europe (2%). Most concerning are the very high levels of drop-out rates in
primary education in Latin America. In 1990, average drop-out rates in primary school in
Latin America (36%) were nearly three times the rates in East Asia (13%) and four times
the rates in Eastern Europe (9%).
There is no evidence to suggest that Latin Americas comparatively poor performance
in education is due to insufficient public spending on education.4 In 1990 and 1995,
average public education spending in Latin America was 3.2 and 3.9% of GDP,
Table 2. Youth illiteracy rates in Latin America, East Asia South Africa and Eastern
Europe (percentage ages 1524)
Male FemaleGDP
1990 2001 1990 2001 per capita (2000 US$)
Latin America Average 4.2 2.7 4.3 2.2 $4,053Argentina 2 2 2 1 7,726Chile 2 1 2 1 4,964Costa Rica 3 2 2 1 4,185Peru 3 2 8 5 2,046RB Venezuela 5 3 3 1 4,818Ecuador 4 2 5 3 1,283Mexico 4 2 6 3 5,935Colombia 6 4 4 2 1,979Brazil 9 6 7 3 3,537
CaribbeanTrinidad and Tobago 0 0 0 0 6,326Cuba 1 0 1 0 ,1,500Jamaica 13 9 5 2 2,873Dominican Republic 13 9 12 8 2,414East Asia Average 2.5 1.2 4.2 1.8 3,240Korea 0 0 0 0 10,890Thailand 1 1 2 2 2,020Philippines 3 1 3 1 990China 3 1 7 3 856Malaysia 5 2 6 2 3,881Indonesia 3 2 7 3 800Vietnam 6 5 6 4 397
South Africa 11 8 12 9 3,019
Eastern Europe Average 0* 0 0 0 4,327Latvia 0 0 0 0 3,259Estonia 0 0 0 0 3,987Poland 0 0 0 0 4,309Hungary 0 0 0 0 4,656Czech Republic 0 0 0 0 5,422
Note: 0 indicated less than 0.5.Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators.
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school and 3.7% in pre-university, all well below regional averages (Gasperini, 1999).
Recent international tests conducted for Latin America also suggest that the quality of theCuban education system, at least at the primary school level, is the highest in the region. 10
The emerging gap in education does not imply that sub-par education performance is the
main cause of the poor growth performance in the region over the period 19802000, as
some authors have suggested (Birdsall & Londono, 1998). There is little conclusive
evidence that education levels across countries explain differential growth performance
(Pritchett, 2001). This is because growth depends on other factors, including an
institutional structure that provides the incentives for growth-enhancing activities and
penalizes those activities that do not contribute to social output. Education level is one of
these factors, but not necessarily the most important. The best evidence for this is the fact
that the initial level of education was similar in East Asia and Latin America in the 1970s,
yet growth rates diverged dramatically in the three subsequent decades. To take another
example, the socialist economies in the former Soviet bloc and Cuba have among the mostadvanced education systems of developing countries, yet growth rates have been slow due
to other disincentives to investment such as the absence of market competition and private
property rights. However, it is reasonable to assume that a greater coverage and quality of
education will enhance the capabilities of the poor (Sen, 1999). As such, it is important to
explain the factors underlying the persistently poor performance of the education system
in Latin America in recent decades.
3. Diagnosing Policy and Institutional Failure in Latin American Education
The most prominent diagnosis of Latin Americas poor performance involves the
identification of several sub-optimal policies and institutional arrangements. Among the
most cited problems is the inefficient use of resources. The best evidence to support this
analysis is the fact that Latin Americas poor education performance in recent decades isnot necessarily due to a lack of public spending. Moreover, the worsening in that
performance in the period 19702000 has coincided with average increasesin spending
over this period. Average education spending by central governments as a percentage of
GDP increased from 3.1% in 1980 to 3.5% in 1990, and 4.1% in 1995 and 2000.11 Other
problems identified include: inequitable access to the education system; disproportionate
spending on higher education which benefits upper-income groups; insufficient resources
spent on primary and secondary education, which would tend to benefit poorer income
groups; poor teaching; lack of incentives for efficiency; poor monitoring of quality; the
failure to set standards for student learning and evaluating performance; the absence of
authority and accountability of schools; the politicization of education ministries and
schools, where promotion is based on political criteria and not meritocracy; and highly
centralized, rigid and often antagonistic labour relations that make consensus over reform
difficult to reach (Birdsall & Londono, 1998; Lee & Barro, 2001; Kaufman & Nelson,2004c).12 However, the simple identification of sub-optimal policies and institutions (or
what I call Type I failure) is an inadequate basis for understanding the persistence of these
problems in some countries as opposed to others. Type I failure, in the first instance, could
be due to knowledge gaps or policy mistakes. The excessively high funding of higher
education (which is likely to be sub-optimal on many criteria such as efficiency, equity,
morality and so on) may be due to incorrect models on the part of decision-makers.
However, Type I failure of this sort becomes less interesting as an explanation for
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sub-optimal policies and institutions over time. As time passes, decision-makers become
aware of the sub-optimalities either through their own observation or due to the plethora ofinternational experts who continually identify the problem over the years.
Indeed, there is substantial evidence that citizens are keenly aware of the problems
facing the education system, and the deterioration in educational performance has indeed
been a major concern for citizens in Latin American countries. Opinion surveys in Latin
America (conducted by the survey firm Latinobarometro) provide an insight into the
intensity of attitudes towards the problem of education in the region. In 2000, education
was ranked as the most important problem in Venezuela, second in Argentina and Mexico.
Education consistently ranked among the three or four most important problems in the
eyes of the public in surveys conducted between 1998 and 2002 (Kaufman & Nelson,
2004, pp. 253257); but despite the extensive concern for education, there has been little
civil society pressure on government to reform education systems.
A more interesting and relevant issue is Type II failurethat is, the failure of thegovernment tocorrect or change sub-optimal policies and institutions even when there is
widespread knowledge of the problem. Type II failure is closely related to Type I failure,
but involves analysing the reasons behind the persistence of policy and institutional
failures over time.13 In explaining Type II failure, it is necessary to incorporate a historical
political economy (not merely technical) analysis since understanding institutional change
requires analysis of the interaction of economic and political processes.
The failure to change sub-optimal policies and institutions can be due to several factors:
leaders unwillingness or lack of interest in promoting or sanctioning changes; the lack of
civil society interest group pressure to demand changes; or the political resistance of
powerful interest groups who would lose privileges/entitlements as a result of proposed
changes. There are several examples of the political dynamics behind Type II failures.
These include the political resistance of middle- and upper-income groups to: (a) paying
higher fees for university education; (b) paying taxes to finance education expansion thatwould benefit the poor; or (c) supporting expenditure switching away from the costly
subsidization of higher education (which tends to benefit wealthier groups) toward
financing primary and secondary education (which tends to benefit poorer groups).14
A second example might involve the inability of poorer groups to engage in effective
collective action to demand better primary and secondary public education either because
it is too costly or because the fragmented nature of political parties in many countries
makes it difficult to aggregate interests on a regional or national level. A third reason is
that those groups with greater political voice such as upper-income groups may have exit
options to use private services in health and education, and thus may not have theincentive
to place political pressure on governments to improve the quality and coverage of public
services. This paper focuses on the second and third sources of Type II failure.
In all these cases, Type II failure needs to be explained by examining the incentives of
those with power and the structure of political competition and organization. While muchwork on poverty and aid effectiveness has focused on defining the right institutions and
the right incentives, the premise of this study is that institutions, such as property rights,
are not only an incentive structure but also simultaneously reflect power relations. For
instance, establishing rights around a fishery provides theincentives to manage the fish
stock efficiently. However, in a world of scarce resources, establishing fishing rights
simultaneouslyimparts a distributional advantage that favours those able to become the
owner of the fishery. It is thus not possible to separate issues of incentives and efficiency
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Table 3. Income inequality in Latin America, East Asia, Eastern Europe and South Africa in the 1990s
Latin America Brazil Chile Colombia Mexico Ecuador Costa Rica Peru Survey year 1996 1994 1996 1995 1995 1995 1996
lowest 20% 2.5 3.5 3.0 3.6 5.4 4.0 4.4 lowest 40% 5.5 6.6 6.6 7.2 9.4 8.8 9.1 highest 20% 63.8 61.0 60.9 58.2 49.7 51.8 51.2 highest 10% 47.6 46.1 46.1 42.8 33.8 34.7 35.4 Gini Index* 60.0 56.5 57.1 53.7 43.7 47.0 46.2
East Asia Indonesia Korea Malaysia Philippines Thailand survey year 1996 1993 1995 1997 1998 lowest 20% 8.0 7.5 4.5 5.4 6.4 lowest 40% 11.3 12.9 8.3 8.8 9.8 highest 20% 44.9 39.3 53.8 52.3 48.4 highest 10% 30.3 24.3 37.9 36.6 32.4 Gini Index* 36.5 31.6 48.5 46.2 41.4
Eastern Europe Latvia Poland Hungary Czech Republic Estonia Caribbean
Trinidad & Tobago Jamaica Dsurvey year 1998 1998 1998 1996 1998 1992 2000 lowest 20% 10.5 7.8 10 10.3 7.0 5.5 6.7 lowest 40% 23.5 20.6 24.7 24.7 18.0 7.6 17.4
highest 20% 40.3 39.7 34.4 35.9 45.1 47.9 46.0 highest 10% 25.9 24.7 20.5 22.4 29.8 31.8 27.4 gini Index* 32.4 31.6 24.4 25.4 37.6 40.3 37.9
* Perfect inequality equals 100, while equality equals 0.
Source: World Bank, World Development Report 2004; World Bank Indicators 2000.
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records in establishing broad-based education. Mariscal and Sokoloff argue that there are
several mechanisms that have led to extreme levels of inequality which tend toreduce/depress investments in schooling institutions:
First, in a setting where private schooling predominated, or where parents paid user
fees for their children, greater wealth or income inequality would tend to reduce the
fraction of the school-age population enrolledholding per capita income constant.
Second, greater inequality may also exacerbate the collective action problems
associated with the establishment and funding of universal public schools because
the distribution of benefits across the population would be significantly different
from the incidence of taxes and other costs or because population heterogeneity
makes it more difficult for communities to reach a consensus on public projects.
Where the wealthy enjoy disproportionate political power, elites could procure
private schooling for their own children and resist being taxed to underwrite orsubsidize services to others. Extreme inequality in wealth or income might also lead
to low levels of schooling on a national basis if it were associated with substantial
disparities across communities or geographic areas.
(Mariscal & Sokoloff, 2000, p. 163)
They also argue that those countries in 19th Century Latin America that were leaders
in the public provision of education and in the attainment of relatively high rates of
literacyArgentina, Costa Rica, and (to a lesser extent) Chilegenerally have relatively
less inequality in income distribution, human capital and political power (Mariscal &
Sokoloff, 2000, p. 197).16 Finally, the authors argue that a greater degree of equality leads
to the more rapid introduction of more broad-based suffrage since differential access to
the right to cast a vote is one of the most direct . . . channels through which an elite can
exercise disproportionate political influence (Mariscal & Sokoloff, 2000, p. 203).Mariscal and Sokoloff argue that the USA and Canada were clear leaders in reducing
restrictions to voting based on wealth and illiteracy and thus had much higher fractions of
their populations voting than anywhere else in the New World (Mariscal & Sokoloff,
2000, p. 203) by 1890. Moreover, the United States and Canada were about a half century
ahead of even the most democratic countries of Latin America (Uruguay, Argentina, and
Costa Rica) in the proportions of the population voting. Through 1940, the United States
and Canada routinely had proportions voting that were 50 to 100% higher than did their
most progressive neighbours to the south, three times higher than Mexico, and up to ten
times higher than in countries such as Brazil and Bolivia (Mariscal & Sokoloff, 2000, p.
203). In sum, they argue that there was at least some relationship between the extents of
literacy and the right to voteor between inequality in human capital and in political
power (Mariscal & Sokoloff, 2000).
The argument that greater inequality and restrictions on the extension of suffrage reducethe coverage and quality of education over time is an important contribution in explaining
the persistence of Latin Americas poor education record relative to North America.
However, the argument also has some important shortcomings. First, while there is a
general relationship between schooling ratios and proportions voting within Latin
America, the expansion of education in many countries such as Argentina, Norway,
Denmark and Sweden occurred well before broad movements toward democratization,
which took place in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries. In the post-1960 period, there
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are also many examples of authoritarian regimes and/or semi-democratic regimes in East
Asia (Singapore, Korea, Taiwan, China, Malaysia), Eastern Europe (the centrally plannedeconomies of the Soviet bloc) and in Latin America (Cuba, Chile) that have achieved
higher levels of education coverage and quality than democratic countries in Latin
America (e.g. Venezuela, Costa Rica, Colombia).17 In these cases, the motivations of
leaders, tax policies and the historically specific coalitions of support may matter more
than regime type. Second, in the post-1960 period, high levels of income inequality do not
preclude successful education reform and progress. Third, within Latin America there are
some important exceptions to what the Mariscal and Sokoloff model would predict. For
instance, Costa Rica has relatively low income inequality, but the distribution of education
is more skewed than in Chile, which has relatively high levels of income inequality, but
more broad access to mass secondary schooling (de Ferranti et al., 2003, p. 85). To take
another example, Malaysia, which has the highest level of income inequality in East Asia
(and a greater degree of inequality than many Latin American economies), has highercoverage than most Latin American economies and outperforms all the Latin American
economies that participate in international tests. The case of Mexico, which has among the
highest levels of income inequality in Latin America, also challenges the Mariscal and
Sokoloff model. As mentioned above, in the 2002 PISA international test for 15-year-olds,
Mexico had the lowest proportion of students of any of the Latin American country scoring
at the lowest levels of proficiency and had the second highest proportion of students
(behind Argentina) scoring at the two highest levels of proficiency.18
From a different perspective, Birdsall & Londono (1998) argue that high income
inequality affects both the demand for and supply of education. On the demand side there
are two relevant factors. First, higher income inequality implies that more households are
likely to be liquidity-constrained, unable to borrow and/or lacking the resources necessary
to keep their children in school.19 Second, and more controversially, Latin Americas
larger endowment of natural resources has historically limited societys demand foreducation. This is because the prevalence of large-scale plantation agriculture and mineral
resource extraction involves relatively few owners of capital and relies generally on large
quantities of unskilled labour (Engerman & Sokoloff, 1997). This factor may limit the
demand for education relative to countries in East and South East Asia, for example, where
more labour-intensive manufacturing production and exports, which require a higher
proportion of skilled workers, are more dominant.20
Birdsall & Londono (1998, p. 125) argue that the supply of education might also be
affected by income inequality. In more unequal societies, there are a greater number of
poor households for a given level of income, which implies that subsidized basic education
is likely to be greater than in more equal societies. As a result, the tax burden on upper-
income groups will have to be larger to finance the education of a greater number of
children from poor households. Upper-income groups are likely to resist this larger tax in
more unequal societies and demand the subsidization of higher education. Evidence of thisis provided by the authors, who point out that in the period 1990 94 the average
budget allocated to higher education as a percentage of the overall education budget was
23% in Latin America compared with 15% in East Asia, as indicated in Table 4.
While the budget allocation to higher education of Latin American countries (in the
sample Birsdall and Londono provide) is on average higher than in East Asia, the
relationship between the level of inequality and the share of public funding of higher
education is far from straightforward. Within Latin America, Mexico and Colombia have
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much smaller shares of budget allocation to higher education than Costa Rica, Uruguay
and Argentina, despite the fact that the two former countries have much higher levels of
income inequality than the latter three countries. Indeed, Mexico has a smaller share of
budget allocation to higher education than Malaysia despite income distribution beingmore unequal in Mexico. In sum, while the example of Cuba (the most egalitarian country
in Latin America in terms of income distribution) supports the hypothesis that more equal
income distribution is better for education coverage and performance, the existence of
important cases that contradict the hypothesis that inequality leads to poorer education
coverage and quality suggests that it is necessary to include other factors beyond income
inequality and regime type in explaining cross-country differences in education
performance.
4. The Dynamics of Exit and Voice in Latin American Education
This section considers three factorspolicy-induced supply of private education, personal
income tax collection and the nature of political partiesthat are central to understanding
the extent to which exit and voice are more likely to be utilized in the context of poorly
performing public education. I propose that an application of Albert Hirschmans exit-
voice framework provides a useful starting point for an alternative explanation of the
persistence of sub-optimal performance in education in Latin America. Hirschman (1970)
argued that the greater use of exit options could atrophy the development of voice, that is,
protest mechanisms. The logic of his framework is as follows: consumers or members of
organizations have competing responses to their perceptions concerning the deterioration
in the quality of the goods they buy or the services they receive. Consumers exit when theyjudge that another firm or organization provides a better good or service. The exit option is
viable when the alternative/substitute good or service is available at an affordable price.
Indirectly and unintentionally exit can cause the deteriorating organization to improve its
performance. This is a general description of how market competition promotes
economic efficiency. Exit options provide a disciplinary mechanism for managers/owners
to provide the best quality goods and services at the lowest cost given available
technology. In a dynamic sense, market competition forces organizations to innovate or
Table 4. Budget allocation to higher education, 199094 (as percent of overall education budget)
East Asia Latin America
Malaysia 17 Argentina 17Thailand 17 Brazil 26Indonesia 18 Chile 20Korea, Rep. 8 Colombia 17Simple average 15 Costa Rica 31
Ecuador 24Mexico 14Uruguay 25Venezuela 35
Simple average 23
Source: Birdsall and Londono (1998: Table 4, p. 127).
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perish, thus providing the incentive structure for firms to improve productivity and
innovate over time.21
Voice, on the other hand, is the act of complaining or of organizing to complain or to
protest with the goal of directly forcing managers to improve the quality of an
organization whose performance has deteriorated. The main point of the framework is to
suggest that there is no pre-established harmony between exit and voice. Instead, the two
mechanisms often work at cross-purposes and tend to undermine each other. In
particular, exit options tend to undermine the use of voice. Easy availability of exit was
shown by Hirschman to be detrimental to the use of voice. The principal reason for this
is that, in comparison to exit, voice is more costly in terms of time, effort and resources.
This is because effective voice requires collective action, which is subject to the well-
known difficulties of organization, representation and free-riding (Olson, 1965). Exit, in
contrast, does not require collective action and co-ordination with other agents. Hence,
the presence of the exit alternative can atrophy the development of the art of voice(Hirschman, 1970, p. 43).
The incentives of upper-income groups to exercise their considerable influencing
capacities or voice in public education (and other public services) are not examined
systematically in the literature. Two variables are likely to affect such incentives. The first
is the availability of private education, which provides an exit option for using public
schools. The second is the extent to which upper-income groups actually pay direct taxes
in the form of personal income and property tax. Relatively high levels of direct tax
collection require substantial co-ordination and co-operation between the state and upper-
income groups, and thus reflects a high degree ofbargainingbetween the state and upper-
income groups about why the taxes are collected and for what purpose (Lieberman, 2002,
pp. 99100). As a result, the absence of such taxes in the tax composition of a country
(whether because upper-income groups evade such taxes or resist laws to increase them)
would tend to reduce the incentives of upper-income groups to exercise voice over howpublic spending is undertaken. I consider each of these factors from the point of view of
the exit-voice framework.
Finally, the nature of political parties and political competition is central to the
construction of an aggregate voice for those households who cannot afford to exit the
public education system. It is argued that the existence of centralized, well-disciplined
parties with a reputation for promoting broad-based public services is crucial in two ways.
First, political parties are one of the few institutions that can aggregate the voice of the
poor. Second, the effectiveness of such parties in the electoral arena provides an important
counter to the loss of powerful voices that results from the exit of wealthier households
from public education.
4.1 Private Enrolment in Comparative Perspective
Let us first consider the availability of private education. The exit option of better quality
private education would, other things being equal, tend to make richer groups opt out of a
poorly performing public education system;22 and indeed, we do see a difference in the
share of private enrolment in total enrolment between Latin America, on the one hand, and
East Asia, Eastern Europe and South Africa, on the other hand, as indicated in Table 5.
In the period 19802001, the share ofprivateenrolment in primary education in Latin
America averaged 15% compared to an average of 5% in East Asia, 2% in South Africa
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Table 5. Private enrolment in education: Latin America, East Asia, South Africa and Eastern Europe compared (private enrolment enrolment)
Primary School Secondary Scho
Latin America 1980 1985 1990 1996 2001 1980 1985 1990
Average 13 14 15 17 17 25 25 24 Argentina 18 19 19 20 20 39 30 29 Bolivia 8 8 10 na 21 17 na 26 Brazil 13 12 14 11 8 na na na Chile 20 32 39 42 38 24 39 42 Colombia 14 13 15 19 19 45 42 39 Costa Rica 3 3 5 5 7 9 9 10 Eucador 16 16 na 18 27 34 34 na Mexico 5 5 6 6 8 19 12 12 Peru 13 14 12 12 14 15 15 14 Uruguay 16 15 16 16 13 17 15 17 Venezuela 13 13 14 18 14 26 25 29
Primary School Secondary School
1998 2001 1998 2001Caribbean
Trinidad & Tobago 5 6 8 18Jamaica na 5 na 3Dominican Republic 12 14 32 23
Primary School Secondary Scho
East Asia 1980 1985 1990 1996 2001 1980 1985 1990 Average 6 6 3 4 6 26 17 15 Indonesia 21 17 na na 16 49 na na Korea 1 1 1 2 1 46 39 41 Malaysia na na 0 1 4 na 8 4 Philippines 5 6 7 7 7 48 41 36 Thailand 8 9 10 13 14 13 12 10 China 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Vietnam 0 0 0 0 0
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South Africa na 0 1 1 2 na 1 1 Primary School Secondary School
Eastern Europe 1998 2001 1998 2001Average 2 2 3 4Latvia 1 1 1 1Estonia 1 2 1 2Poland 1 5Hungary 5 5 6 6Czech Republic 1 1 6 7
Source: UNESCO, World Education Report (1991, 1993, 1995, 1998 and 2000) and EFA Global Monitoring Report 2005.
Table 5. Continued
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and 2% in the transition economies of Eastern Europe. Interestingly, Mexico and South
Africa, both of which have among the worlds most unequal income distributions, hadrelatively low private enrolment over this period. This indicates that greater income
inequality alone does not determine the extent to which private education at the secondary
level is either demanded or supplied.
The situation is somewhat different for secondary education, though again the share
of private enrolment is on average higher in Latin America. Although both regions had
a similar share of private enrolment in 1980, in the period 19852001 the share of
private enrolment in secondary education averaged 23% in Latin America compared to
the East Asian average of 16%. There were, however, substantial variations within each
region. Brazil, Peru, Mexico, Costa Rica and Uruguay were well below their regional
averages, while Indonesia, South Korea and the Philippines were substantially above
their regional average, and indeed above the Latin American average. Again, South
Africa had negligible private enrolment in secondary education, and the transitioneconomies in the sample had very low levels of private enrolment in secondary
education. Cuba, as mentioned, has 100% enrolment in public schools at all levels of
education23.
There are at least two factors that may explain the greater supply of private education
(particularly at the primary school level) in Latin America. First, some countries such as
Argentina and especially Chile provide extensive subsidies to private schools. Not
surprisingly, the share of private enrolment is higher than the Latin American average in
these countries (Somerset al., 2004, p. 49). Second, schools run by the Catholic Church
in Latin America are widespread (UNESCO, 2004, p. 97), which contributes to the
increased supply of non-state schools.
It is important to note that the supply of private education is not simply an
exogenous variable. It may well be the case that parents choose to opt out of sending
their children to public schools because of the poor quality of such schools. While itis beyond the scope of the paper to consider this issue in depth, it seems reasonable to
posit that the policy of providing state funding to private schools and the historical
availability of state-funded Catholic schools lowers the cost of exitto private schools.
It is plausible to assume that, in low- and even middle-income countries, higher levels
of income inequality should limit the exit option for households wishing to send
their children to private schools, unless there is state subsidization of private education
either through direct subsidies to non-state schools or indirectly through state-financed
voucher schemes. Given the higher average level of private enrolment in Latin
America, and given the fact that the region, on average, has much higher inequality
than in other regions with similar levels of income per capita, it is reasonable to assert
that state funding of higher education is higher in Latin America than in other middle-
income regions. Indeed, of the Latin American countries with the highest degree of
income inequality (Brazil, Chile, Mexico and Colombia), only Chile is above theLatin American average in terms of private enrolment. Chile is also the country with
the most expensive voucher programme in the region (see Tables 2 and 4). Whatever
the reasons behind greater enrolment in private sector education (and here more
systematic research on the public policies that affect such enrolment decisions is
needed24), the consequences of such large-scale exit from the public education
system are relevant for understanding obstacles to reform in contemporary Latin
America.
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4.2 Personal Income Taxation in Comparative Perspective
The second factor that influences the extent to which the voice of upper-income groups is
exercised involves the level and structure of taxes. Taxation is the nexus that binds state to
citizen and in particular creates mutual obligations between government leaders and
interest groups. Greater internal tax collection would tend to increase the legitimate
demands citizens make on the state. In poor countries, the poor contribute a negligible
amount to direct taxation given their low incomes and the fact that many work in the
informal sector and subsistence agriculture. However, the greater the extent to which
upper-income groups contribute to direct taxes (in the form of personal income and
corporate tax) the more likely it becomes that such groups will use greater voice. This is
because they have a more direct stake in how public resources are spent.
There have been very few systematic comparisons of the composition of tax across
developing regions. The capacity of states to collect direct taxes (income and property
taxes) provides an important insight into their power and legitimacy vis-a-vis upper-income and middle-class groups (Lieberman, 2001). The share of income tax in total tax
collection differs substantially between Latin America and the other middle-income
regions, namely East Asia, Eastern Europe, South Africa, and some countries in the
English-speaking Caribbean. Consider the differences that emerged in the period
19972002 between Latin American and other middle-income economies in terms of the
share of direct taxes collected as a percentage of GDP. In the period 19972002, personal
income and property tax collection in East Asia was, on average, four times higher as a
proportion of national income than in Latin America, as indicated in Table 6.
This significant difference in personal income tax collection in 1997 is notdue to any
substantial differences in income per capita across the regions.25 The share of personal
income and property tax as a percentage of GDP was over five times higher in the English-speaking Caribbean,26 over six times higher in Eastern Europe, and was over 12 times
higher in South Africa, all compared with Latin Americas average.27 In the period198588, the share of personal income and property tax as a percentage of GDP was
nearly double in East Asia compared to Latin America. It is interesting to note that in the
period 197578 and 198588, Mexico and Costa Rica had among the highest shares of
personal income and property tax in the region (Table 5).28 These are also the two
countries that had the lowest share of enrolment in private primary and secondary school
education (Table 5). In terms of education performance, Costa Rica had among the lowestlevels of illiteracy in the region, and 15-year-old students from Mexico were amongst the two
best performers in the 2002 PISA exam.
When one expands the category of direct taxes to include corporate income tax, East
Asia still collected over 75% more as a percentage of GDP in the period 19972002 (Di
John, 2006, Table 3, p. 14). The Eastern European and the English-speaking Caribbean
economies had more than doublethe income tax collection as a share of GDP compared
with Latin America over the same period (Di John, 2006).
The lower levels of income tax collection have meant that the burden of structural
change in tax falls relatively more on indirect taxes in Latin America than in East Asia, or
Eastern Europe, particularly in the period 19972002 (Di John, 2006, Table 4, p. 15). 29
Most relevant for our discussion, the low direct tax payment of upper-income groups
means that they have less direct interest in exercising their voice toward the state and/or
toward influencing the platforms of political parties with respect to the issue of the quality
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and coverage of provision of public education (and other) services. Moreover, the low
level of direct tax (combined with the very high incomes upper-income groups earn in
many Latin American countries) means that these groups have substantial disposable
income to finance private education for their children. This expands further the exit
options of wealthier groups and reduces their incentive to use the art of voice.
4.3 The Nature of Political Parties in Comparative Perspective
A third factor that would affect the persistence of Type II failure in education policies is
the nature of political competition and the structure of political parties. The nature and
organization of political competition affect the extent to which political leaders and
policy-makers are pressed to improve public education delivery. For example, if poor
people are organized around fragmented, local and personalized interests, they are
unlikely to make their numbers count in electoral terms, or to get political parties
interested in pursuing issues of concern to them.30 The exit of upper-income groups from
Table 6. Personal income and property tax burden: East Asia, Latin America, South Africa
and Eastern Europe compared (Ratio of Personal Income and Property Tax as a percent ofGDP, %)
197578 198588 19972002 2000 GDP per capitaLatin America (2000 US$)
Average 1.7 1.2 1.0 $4,399Argentina 0.4 0.8 1.1 7,726Brazil 0.2 0.2 1.4 3,537Chile 3.3 1.1 na 4,964Colombia 1.8 1.6 0.6 1,979Costa Rica 2.9 2.2 0.7 4,185Mexico 2.7 2.0 na 5,935Peru 1.5 na 1.5 2,046Venezuela 1.0 1.0 1.0 4,818CaribbeanTrinidad & Tobago 2.6 6.6 5.4 6,326Jamaica 5.4 5.5 2,873Dominican Republic 1.1 1.1 1.8 2,414East Asia Average 1.8 2.3 3.9 3,716Indonesia 0.8 0.9 3.5 800Korea 1.9 2.8 3.6 10,890Malaysia 2.1 2.4 6.1 3,881Philippines 1.6 1.1 2.6 990Thailand 1.1 1.9 2.2 2,020Taiwan 3.4 4.5 5.2South Africa 6.1 7.7 12.9 3,019Eastern Europe Average 6.8 4,327Latvia 6.5 3,259Estonia 7.7 3,987Poland 6.7 4,309
Hungary 7.8 4,656Czech Republic 5.2 5,422
Source: IMF Government Financial Statistics and International Financial Statistics, IMF;Statistical Yearbook of the Republic of China 2002 for Taiwan.
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public education would not be so damaging to the monitoring capacity of civil society if
those that remained in public schools had the political capacity to pressure governments toreform if teaching quality declines.
The political capacity of the lower-income groups to monitor public education is greatly
enhanced by the presence of well-established, institutionalized and broad-based political
parties. In many countries, however, political parties are often fragmented and organized
through clientelist networks. As Keefer & Khemani (2005, p. 12) argue:
Politics characterized by patronclient relations tend to produce an oversupply of
tangible, targeted benefits to supporters such as state employment, buildings and
roads. Narrowly targeted goods can be provided to individuals and small groups and
therefore are seen as clear evidence of political patrons fulfilling their promises to
clients. Universal access to education is not easily targeted and improvements in
quality are also difficult to target, both because they tend to involve managerialimprovements that spread throughout the system and because they are difficult for
voters to attribute to politicians. For example, if teacher quality or attendance has
improved, voters cannot distinguish whether that happened because the teacher
decided to do a better job, because of a generalized reform in teacher quality that is
affecting all teachers, or because of the targeted intervention of a particular
politician.
Also because of the unstable and fluid nature of many clientelist polities, the time
horizon of many politicians is short-term:
Promises that concern jobs or public works can be fulfilled relatively rapidly.
However, political competitors with short time horizons are unable to credibly
promise to implement projects that have a longer time horizon in achieving
improvements such as in education.
(Keefer & Khemani, 2005, p. 13)
As a result, politicians in clientelist parties and polities are less likely to find that long-term
reform initiatives will generate political dividends to the extent that short-term measures
do. Where political parties are well established, institutionalized, with a broad-base of
support and have a reputation for promoting welfarist policies, there are stronger
incentives for politicians to adopt longer time horizons and a more encompassing (as
opposed to more targeted) approach to social service provision and monitoring.
The Colombian case reveals some important obstacles to pro-poor educational reform
that political party clientelism and fragmentation have generated. Despite important
initiatives to reform the Colombian education system, in particular through decentraliza-
tion of service delivery and the promotion of school autonomy in the period 1991 2005,
reform initiatives have generally failed to improve the quality of public education (Duarte,
1998; Lowden, 2004).The clientelist and fragmented nature of the party system has been identified by political
analysts as the main reason behind this failure (Duarte, 1998; Lowden, 2004).
The spending of education resources and hiring of staff continue to be used as principal
tools of political patronage, with resources devoted to quality improvements largely
absent. Regional parties control the key positions in the regional education system
(Duarte, 1998, pp. 140142). The weakness of the legislature in enacting reforms is due to
the internal fragmentation and clientelism of the party system, and in particular of the
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Liberal party (Archer & Shugart, 1997). The electoral system used in the Congress is
historically based on accommodating the countrys powerful but decentralized regionalelites (Archer & Shugart, 1997). This makes building coalitions around large-scale
reforms in education difficult. The highly fragmented nature of the party system at both
national and regional levels and the high degree of competition among political groups to
obtain key positions in the departmental and municipal administration are also behind the
high turnover among the directors and senior staff of both national and municipal
educational institutions (Archer & Shugart, 1997).
There is some evidence that the degree of political party centralization seems to be an
important feature of relatively successful education performance in democratic regimes.
Malaysia, Sri Lanka and the state of Kerala in India all have education indicators that
are greater than would be expected for their per capita income (Dreze & Sen, 1989,
pp. 226 253). In contrast to Colombia, each of these countries/states also possesses
relatively centralized political party structures that effectively aggregate the voice of theless wealthy segments of the population.31 The extent to which political parties can
represent the voice of the less privileged sectors of society seems to be a central element
in compensating for the damaging effects that exit by wealthier parents can have on
public education systems.
5. Accounting for Variations in Public Sector Education within Latin America
The variations in education performance within Latin America are reasonably consistent
with the proposed framework. Cuba, the best performer, has no private enrolment and has
a centralized, well-disciplined party whose legitimacy is derived, in part, from the
provision of broad-based, quality public education and health. It derives all of its
taxation or revenues by direct means by appropriating the surplus created by workers in
public enterprises (as did the Soviet Union). Apart from Cuba, three of the next bestperformers are Chile, Mexico and Costa Rica. The latter two countries have relatively low
private enrolment rates (and by implication relatively low levels of state funding of non-
state education), relatively high direct taxation and well-developed political parties. For
these two countries, faring well on all of these three factors contributes substantially to
providing the incentives for the powerful effectively to exercise voice in how public
education is provided. There is no case of a country in the region that performs well in
public education that is lacking in all three categories.
It is important to stress, however, that the nature of political parties within Latin
America is also central in explaining why high levels of private enrolment are not
necessarily detrimental to public education performance. In this perspective, the relatively
good performance of the Chilean education system (withinLatin America) merits further
discussion. On the one hand, the Chilean case seems at odds with the explanation put
forward since private enrolment rates are the highest in the region at the primary andsecondary school level. However, as emphasized earlier, the extent to which political
parties can represent the voice of the less privileged sectors of society (and demand,
more generally, state provision of social services) seems central to compensating for the
damaging effects that exit by wealthier parents can have on public education systems.
Indeed, the Chilean polity has been characterized by strong, centralized political party
pressure and civil society demands for state welfare provision, even during its
authoritarian period under the Pinochet regime (Dreze & Sen, 1989, pp. 229239). It is
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important to note that Chile is the onlycountry with high levels of private enrolmentand
low personal income tax (in more recent years) that has had relatively good educationindicators in regional (if not international) terms.
Low levels of personal income tax were not, however, always a feature of the Chilean
tax system. In the 1970s, Chile in fact had the highestrate of personal income tax in the
region (see Table 6), which is consistent with the social welfarist nature of its party system.
While tax policy reforms under Pinochet led to substantial reductions in the income tax
share (as happened throughout the region in the 1980s and 1990s), the legacy of welfarist
parties and the ethos of social service provision have survived in Chile, as Dre ze and Sen
argue. Overall, the countries with the highest personal income tax in the 1970s were
precisely Chile, Mexico and Costa Rica (see Table 6), all of which have maintained
relatively centralized, social democratic-dominant political parties.32 These are also the
three countries (Cuba aside) that have had relatively good education performance within
Latin America. The Cuban case, as mentioned, further supports the hypothesis that strong,centralized parties make a difference to social service provision within the Latin American
context.
Relatively poor education performance in Brazil is also reasonably consistent with the
argument put forward. In the periods 1975 78 and 1985 88, Brazil had one of thelowest
shares of personal income tax in the region, with its share increasing to just slightly above
the Latin American average in the period 19972002.33 Private enrolment rates were
similar to the Latin American average in primary education over the periods analysed but
still double the rate of Mexico and Costa Rica. An important question is why more
households did not exit the public school system. The sustained relatively low private
enrolment rates in Brazil may be explained by two factors: first, the very unequal pattern of
income distribution means that the number of households who can afford private
education is limited; and second, there was no state provision of vouchers, as in Chile, to
finance moves to private schools (see discussion of Chilean voucher system later).As mentioned earlier, of the four Latin American countries in the sample with the greatest
degree of inequality, only Chile has private enrolment rates above the Latin American
average, and this is because Chile has an extensive voucher scheme. What is important in
countries with very unequal distributions of income is that the top 10% of income earners
appropriate well over 50% of national income (Table 3). To the extent that wealthier
households are more influential and exercise their voice on an individual basis, and to the
extent that there are fewer such households the more unequal the income distribution, even
a relatively small level of household exit from the public education system can result in a
significant loss of powerful voices.
Nevertheless, it is still necessary to explain why the public education system has not
been forced to reform. Here, the role of political party structure becomes important. In
terms of political party structure, the Brazilian polity is characterized byregionally based,
fragmentedand clientelist political parties that make aggregating voice among the lessprivileged a difficult task (Lieberman, 2001). Given the extraordinary economic and
political power of upper-income groups in Brazil (due to their ability to avoid direct,
progressive taxes and their ability to appropriate among the highest shares of national
income, as reflected in the country having one of the highest levels of income inequality in
the region), the absence of well-disciplined, centralized political parties appears
fundamental to understanding the lack of civil society pressure to reform the public
education system (Draibe, 2004). The fragmented and clientelist nature of the party system
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probably explains why there were no collective societal actors of national scope able to
present a coherent reform agenda (Draibe, 2004, p. 384). While there is some evidencethat exit by upper- and middle-class families was occurring in the 1970s (Draibe, 2004),
the evidence on Brazil suggests that poorly organized voice has probably been as
important, if not more so, than exit by the middle classes in explaining lagging public
education coverage and quality.
With respect to political party structures, the Mexican case also warrants a brief
explanation. It is true that the Mexican political party system historically has been
clientelist (see Craig & Cornelius, 1995). In the Colombian case, for example, it was
argued that a clientelist party system negatively affected public education performance
because the voice of the less privileged was more difficult to aggregate. However, it is
important to distinguish betweentypesof patronclient relations. The hegemonic party in
Mexico for most of the 20th Century, the Partido Revolucionario Institucional(PRI), has
been very centralized and well disciplined in the context of a system that imparts strongpresidential powers (Weldon, 1997). The PRI in Mexico was noted for being a clientelist
party, but unlike the Colombian case, the party structure was very centralized, which
makes aggregating interests less of a problem. Moreover, the PRI derived much of its
legitimacy from supporting broad-based public service provision.
If one compares Chile and Mexico, the former has high private enrolment, but a history
of welfarist political parties, while the latter has low private enrolment but a more
sustained income tax effort and a historically dominant centralized (if clientelist) political
party.34 The performance of students in both countries is similar in international tests, with
Mexico performing a bit better. The key point here is that all three factors (income tax,
private enrolment, and the nature and structure of political parties) can make a difference;
and in the Latin American context, the nature of political parties proves pivotal in
overcoming the exit-inducing effect of high private enrolment, as the Chilean case
suggests.I have presented a very rudimentary discussion of the nature of Latin American political
parties. A more detailed account of the nature of political party systems and their effects on
mobilizing the voice of less privileged groups and classes would be required to improve
our understanding of public education coverage and quality within Latin America. One
important cause for concern, however, is the recent emergence of anti-party discourses and
the rise of political outsiders, particularly (but not exclusively) in the Andean region (see
Roberts, 1996). Such anti-party discourses and governance patterns do not augur well for
the possibilities of (re)constructing progressive and institutionalized political parties that
have been central to the formation of effective welfare states (Baldwin, 1990; Hicks, 1999;
Judt, 2005, pp. 7277, 360373).
6. Policy Implications
In light of the three factors presented above, it is not surprising that there have been few
demands from the wealthier and more powerful segments of civil society in pushing
educational reform in Latin America. Reform initiatives have been mostlystate-ledaffairs
spearheaded either by presidents or by small teams of bureaucrats in the education and
planning ministries and by initiatives taken by international financial institutions such as
the World Bank and Inter-American Development Bank. Tellingly, political parties,
labour unions, business chambers and other interest groups have played a negligible role
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within Latin American countries in putting pressure on governments to improve the
quality and coverage of education at the primary and secondary level (Kaufman & Nelson,2004c).35 This provides some corroboration for our emphasis on the absence of effective
political party structures in aggregating the voice mechanisms of the poor in Latin
America. In essence, reforms have been more supply-led by states rather than demand-led
by interest groups in civil society. Applying Hirschmans exit-voice framework in the
Latin American context where private education options are relatively high and where
upper-income groups do not pay high levels of direct taxation sheds light on the weakness
of interest group pressure within Latin America to push for education reforms which, in
turn, contributes to the persistence of deteriorating public education quality and coverage
in many countries in the region.
In considering the coverage and quality of education, the most successful middle-
income countries are in Eastern Europe, East Asia, Cuba, and in the former British
colonies of Trinidad and Tobago, and Jamaica (at least insofar as those two have a netenrolment in secondary education well above what would be predicted based on their
income per capita). In most of these cases, the rate of private enrolment in primary
education is relatively low, the rate of direct taxation is relatively high, and political party
structures do not suffer from severe fragmentation.
The exit-voice framework also may shed some light on why the introduction of voucher
schemes to promote private education might limit the performance of state education.
The basic premise of voucher schemes is that providing choice to parents increases
competition into the education market, and thus incentives to managers of schools to
improve their service or face declining enrolment. However, a problem with such schemes
is that the very poorest are unlikely to be able to afford to take advantage of them.
Therefore, the introduction of vouchers does not eliminate public education, but reduces
its share in total enrolment.
Chile provides an interesting and important case in that there has been extensive use ofvouchers to subsidize private education since 1980. The Chilean policy of vouchers,
implemented by the military regime in 1980, provided for fully subsidized deregulated
private schools, which competed for pupils with deregulated public schools in all
metropolitan neighbourhoods (Carnoy, 1997, p. 107). This is the main reason why Chile
has the highest rate of private enrolment at the primary and secondary school level in Latin
America (Table 4).
The record of Chiles experience with the widespread use of vouchers, however, is far
from encouraging. The results have been summarized by Carnoy (1997, pp. 107111) as
follows:
(1) Total spending in education fell in the 1980s with the federal share of spending
falling to 80 percent in 1985 and 68 percent in 1990. Middle and upper-income
groups made up the shortfall in spending in two ways: first, more prosperous
districts were able to spend more on public schools than were poorer areas;
second, parents in wealthier areas whose children attended private schools
could supplement their vouchers with higher add-on fees than could parents in
poorer districts.
(2) Higher-income families were more likely to use the vouchers for private
schools. In 1990, 72 percent of the families in the lowest 40 percent of the
income distribution attended public schools. Among the next-highest 40
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percent, 51 percent of families sent their children to public schools (and 43
percent to subsidized private schools). Of the families in the top 20 percent ofthe income distribution, only 25 percent sent their children to public schools, 32
percent used subsidized private schools, and 43 percent sent their children to
(non-voucher) private schools.
(3) There was no improvement in student achievement. In national standardized
tests, Spanish and mathematics scores for fourth-graders fell between 1982 and
1985. Students in lower-income public schools recorded the sharpest decline
in test scores, but students in lower-income subsidized private schools also fell
[italics added]. Students in the middle-socioeconomic level schools had small
increases in test scores, whether they were in public or subsidized private
schools. By 1992, scores had recovered to the levels of 1980.
(4) There is also evidence of widening inequality in the education system. Urban
rural gaps increased, and the gap between high- and low-income studentswidened in terms of tests scores without increasing the overall level of
academic achievement.
The Chilean experience suggests that increasing private sector options for education was
disappointing because only the better off segments of the population benefited from
voucher schemes. Private sector schools perform better than public schools in Chile not
because of any inherent governance advantages of private school management; rather,
private schools succeed on average by administering more selective admissions tests and
by skimming the most able and privileged students (Somers et al., 2004, pp. 6069).
However, it is also possible that subsidizing private education induces an exit of better
off and able students, which denies those left in public schools the experience of positive
peer pressure and the voice mechanisms that wealthier parents seem to exercise to a
greater extent than poorer ones. Moreover, the policy of subsidizing private education on a
large scale sends a signal that public education should be avoided if possible. This not onlyfurther induces exit by those middle-class parents who can afford to benefit from such
policies, but also sends a demoralizing signal to those working in the public educationsector that their work is not valued as much as that of private sector teachers. Comparative
evidence suggests that Chile would perform better by limiting exit options to private
schools because of the well-developed welfarist traditions of its political parties.
It is important to note that there are severe data limitations in making cross-country
comparisons in education quality, since very few developing countries (excluding most in
Latin America) participate in internationally administered tests. Moreover, there is no
systematic cross-country evidence that disaggregates the respective performance of public
and private school students. Such disaggregation would enable a further testing of the
framework presented. One clear policy implication is that education ministries in less-
developed countries should plan to have students participate in such exams. This will
enable countries to monitor their progress and will facilitate much richer comparative and
historical analysis.
7. Conclusion
This paper draws on the insights of Albert Hirschmans exit-voice framework and attempts
to make a small contribution to the vast literature on the political economy of public
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education performance and reform. It is argued that the combination of low direct taxation
and high levels of private primary enrolment provides exit options for the wealthy andreduces their incentive to exercise voice in the face of poor education performance.
Moreover, fragmented and clientelist political party structures limit the provision and
monitoring of public education, and thus reduce the political capacity of the poor to
exercise their voice regarding public education coverage and quality. The combination of
these factors implies the challenges for reforming public education are formidable in many
countries in Latin America. This paper also contributes by bringing together disparate
literature on the political economy of education reform, tax data and the nature of political
parties to highlight important regional differences between Latin America and more
successful education performance in other middle-income regions.
The broad cross-regionaldata do seem to support the case that relatively high personal
income tax shares and relatively low private enrolment rates (particularly in primary
education) matter a great deal in explaining differences in education performance (withouta broader discussion of comparative political party structures across the regions).
The evidence suggests that political party structure matters for variations within Latin
America. This may very well be because the very unequal income distribution in the
region puts pressure on the attainment of quality publiceducation, which in turn requires
vigilant civil society and political party pressure in many countries.
One South East Asian country with Latin American levels of inequality, Malaysia,
has overcome this problem with a centralized political party, the United Malays National
Organization (UMNO), the dominant member of the National Barisan coalition, whose
political legitimacy is derived from providing education, investment and employment
opportunities to underprivileged Malays.36 As the dominant political party in Malaysia, it
is also responsible for extracting relatively high levels of progressive personal income tax
collection. The existence of high levels of inequality cannot, on its own, explain poor
public education performance, but it does present significant political, fiscal andinstitutional challenges. The fact that Latin America has a much longer tradition of
electoral politics in the 20th Century than either East Asia or Eastern Europe makes the
issue of comparative political party structures less salient for cross-regional comparisons,
though such comparisons will become more relevant to the extent that competitive party
politics is consolidated across the developing world.37 A greater understanding of the
social basis of support and legitimacy in either less democratic regimes (Cuba) or in
younger democracies (East Asia and the ex-Socialist, transition economies in Eastern
Europe) would be required to explain more fully why such states have been more effective
in providing more broad-based quality public education than in Latin American polities.
I have also highlighted that unfavourable initial conditions (such as unequal income
distributionand lowper capita incomelevels) are not impossible to overcome. Countries such
as Malaysia, Korea, Cuba, the state of Kerala in India and, much earlier, the socialist
economies of the former Soviet Union have transformed once poorly performing educationsystems. However, these cases also highlight that capacity building is not simply a technical
issue but involves changes in political balances and strategies and changes in the ideas and
policies of ruling coalitions. In historical perspective, the legacy of socialism and British
colonialism seems to have been important in providing both the institutions and the
motivations for broad-based education systems, at least in the countries in the sample.
The big picture that emerges is that when economic e lites are forced to pay income
taxes, where state-funding for private education is relatively low, and where there are
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effective political parties with a reputation for promoting broad-based public education,
aggregate education performance in a country is likely to be better. In Latin America, aserious concern emerges. That is, state funding of private education through subsidization
of private and religious schools creates a much higher supply of and demand for non-state
education than would exist given the regions high level of income inequality. This is
because the median household would be unable to afford non-state schools in the absence
of such subsidies. Such policies create opportunities for the middle classes (but not the
poor, a significantly larger group) to exit the public education system. Moreover, state
revenue in the region is increasingly financed not by progressive income taxes, but by
neutral and often regressive indirect taxes (particularly value-added taxes).38
The combination of these policies not only reduces the use of voice by such groups, but
also exacerbates further the inequalities within the region. Finally, the clientelist,
fragmented and often populist nature of many political parties in the region means that
countering such inequities is all the more difficult.The exit-voice framework, applied to the context of substantial and durable inequalities
in economic and political power across income groups and classes, has other important
policy implications. Good government depends in part on the incentives of elites and the
pressures they put on public agencies to deliver services. The good governance literature
(e.g. World Development Report, 1997, 2002 (World Bank, 1997, 2002)) stresses the
importance of building civil society demands without analysing how the structure of
power and voice, and conflicts of interestwithin civil society affect the actual political
pressures that state institutions face. The problems of education performance are not
primarily technical but have more to do with historical political economy factors
underlying the exit to private education among wealthier groups, the inability of states in
Latin America to collect direct income taxes from those same groups and the inability of
many political parties to monitor poor public education coverage and quality. This
analysis also suggests that improving income distribution without addressing the otherfactors that influence the structure of voice may not necessarily improve education
coverage and quality. There is wide variationof income distribution within Latin America
that coincides with relatively similar outcomes in terms of education coverage and quality.
Unless greater attention is paid to the political economy of exit-voice dynamics, it is
unlikely that reform initiatives in education will a