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The Effect of Tutoring on Secondary Streaming in Egypt

Asmaa Elbadawy ()

No 769, Working Papers from Economic Research Forum

Abstract: In Egypt, tutoring has developed beyond being a remedial education activity for academically weak students to being an investment tool used by households to enhance children’s education performance and give them a competitive edge. Consequently, tutoring represents a sizeable household expenditure, and thus it is important to examine whether, and to what extent, tutoring pays off in terms of better educational outcomes. The literature on tutoring effects is small, and most of it does not take into account the potential endogeneity of tutoring, making the accuracy of the estimated tutoring effect questionable. In this paper, exploiting the longitudinal nature of the dataset, I estimate the effect of taking tutoring on the likelihood of joining the secondary level stream that leads to university. I use the percentage of the working-age population that works in the education sector at the local level—a proxy for the supply of tutors—as an instrument for taking tutoring. Without using an instrumental variable, tutoring has a statistically significant positive effect. After introducing an instrumental variable, this effect disappears, providing some evidence that endogeneity may be present. However, the estimate of the tutoring coefficient is imprecise and there is some evidence that the instrument variable does not have sufficient power to get a reliable estimate of the tutoring effect.

Pages: 19
Date: 2013-09, Revised 2013-09
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Published by The Economic Research Forum (ERF)

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