A Short-Term Cost-Effectiveness Evaluation of Better-Quality Daycare Centers

Peer Reviewed icon Peer Reviewed
Author
Barros, Ricardo ;
Franco, Samuel ;
Mendonça, Rosane ;
Rosalém, Andrezza
Date issued
December 2011
Subject
Early Childhood Education;
Child Development
JEL code
D61 - Allocative Efficiency • Cost—Benefit Analysis;
I21 - Analysis of Education;
I22 - Educational Finance • Financial Aid
Category
Working Papers
Studies of the effects of pre-school programs on child development in developing countries have found scant impact. This study was conducted to reconcile the importance of daycare for child development with the empirical estimates of small effects. Using a random sample of 500 children from 100 daycare centers in the Municipality of Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), the study combines a flexible function relating child development to daycare center quality. A hedonic cost function permits an evaluation of the cost-effectiveness of better-quality daycare centers. The study finds that the developmental age of children attending high-quality services is greater than that of children attending low quality centers. It also finds that quality improvement can be measured in a number of ways, with different cost implications or impacts on child development.
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