Punching Below its Weight: The U.S. Government Approach to Education in the Developing World

40 Pages Posted: 20 Feb 2010

Date Written: February 17, 2010

Abstract

Global education plays an important role in contributing to U.S. foreign policy objectives. In a recent speech, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton highlighted education, along with health, agriculture, security, and local governance as the core areas for U.S. international development investment. She emphasized the importance of education, particularly of girls and youth, in improving global stability, speeding economic growth, and helping global health, all of which advance U.S. interests in the world.

But how effective has the U.S. government been in supporting global education? Unfortunately, its many good education activities and programs are not leveraged for maximum impact on the ground, especially in situations of armed conflict and state fragility. Challenges of U.S. foreign assistance – for example, fragmentation across multiple agencies, lack of policy coherence, diminished multilateral engagement – generally affects its work in education. Luckily some of the core strengths of U.S. assistance have an impact as well, specifically the large amount of resources (in total terms, if not relative terms) devoted to education and the vast breadth and depth of American academic, philanthropic and NGO partners engaged in pioneering work on education in the developing world.

This report analyzes the effectiveness of U.S. government education work specifically in relation to conflict-affected and fragile states. Findings across five domains – global reach, resources, technical expertise, policy and multilateral partnerships – show that U.S. education aid falls critically short of what it is capable of achieving. The U.S. government has substantial strengths in this area, especially in global reach, resources, and technical expertise, demonstrating a real comparative advantage in the field of education in situations of conflict and fragility. However, its fragmented policy across agencies and its limited multilateral engagement prevent it from maximizing its strengths, leaving it punching below its weight on this important issue. In this sense, the U.S. government is a classic underachiever, failing to efficiently deploy its many capabilities and potential for maximum impact.

Keywords: U.S. foreign aid, development, education, international education, universal education

Suggested Citation

Winthrop, Rebecca, Punching Below its Weight: The U.S. Government Approach to Education in the Developing World (February 17, 2010). Center for Universal Education Working Paper No. 1, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1554587 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1554587

Rebecca Winthrop (Contact Author)

Brookings Institution ( email )

1775 Massachusetts Ave, NW
Washington, DC 20036
United States

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