@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00012174, author = {JUSWANTO, Wawan}, journal = {国際開発研究フォーラム, Forum of International Development Studies}, month = {Mar}, note = {This paper utilizes Benefit Incidence Analysis (BIA) to analyze the incidence of government expenditure on education services to different segments of the population and logistic regression model to estimate demand for the services in Indonesia in 2005.\
This paper found that (ⅰ) lower-income quintiles have a larger share of enrollment in primary school, whereas for the higher income quintiles enrollment is highest in higher education. (ⅱ) Distribution of expenditure on primary education favors those with a lower-income. On the other hand, expenditure on secondary education attests for a distribution in favors higher-income group, but also shows a greater inequality than the distribution of personal income. (ⅲ) Income, education level of parents and scholarship have a significant influence on increasing the probability of a child attending school. Age of child and family size, however have a negative correlation with school attendance. It was also found that, gender, teacher-student ratio and school density variables have varied impact on school enrollment across areas and levels of education.}, pages = {121--138}, title = {Distribution of Government Expenditure and Demand for Education Services:The Case of Indonesia}, volume = {39}, year = {2010} }