OUR SPECIFIC INITIATIVES
A Focus on STEM:
Rural students who complete an undergraduate degree see more than a 4-fold increase in salaries and STEM undergraduates are twice as employable as non-STEM undergraduates
The Need for Spoken English:
India’s farm to non-farm transition is largely concentrated in the services and sales sectors, where Spoken English is increasingly a requirement. Fluency in English results in higher labour mobility, wage premiums, and an increased likelihood of formal employment.
CONTEXT AND CHALLENGES
01
Student learning levels in India flatline in secondary school. Due to poor foundational learning, when children progress into secondary grades (7-12), there is a low level of achievement and teachers are not equipped to provide remedial academic instruction. This results in a widening learning deficit that significantly reduces the child’s learning and employment prospects as well as the government’s return on investment in that child’s education.
02
A completed secondary education is an important determinant of the difference in the lifetime earnings and incomes of workers however currently in India 17.1% of all secondary grade pupils drop out between Grade 8 – Grade 12.
03
Gender is a significant issue at the secondary level, due to poor sanitation, distance, early marriage and issues with male teachers. 16.9% of girls drop out at the secondary level (DISE, 2016).
04
There is minimal life-skills coaching at this stage contributing negatively to students’ holistic development and success with transition to the workforce. Specifically, there is also a felt need to cater to the lack of technical expertise which prevents low income students from qualifying for professional and higher education institutes
DESIGNING THE SOLUTION
Within Secondary Education, STEM courses are particularly beneficial for low income youth:
An Undergraduate degree, especially in STEM, can significantly improve a child’s employment prospects. STEM undergraduates are twice as employable as non-STEM undergraduates. Furthermore, admission into top 10% elite STEM colleges leads to a 10-fold increase in income.
Based on these finding, Social Finance India is in the process of designing a Pay for Success framework to establish outcome pricing to positively impact STEM outcomes for students to enter professional colleges
The Program will seek to measurably improve outcomes for students in Grades 11-12:
- Improving the success rate in national examinations;
- Increasing the percentage of students scoring a first-class or a distinction at Grade 12 graduation;
- Increasing the number of students qualifying for professional and technical post-secondary college seats;
Over a 10-year period, this program has the potential to positively impact over one million rural youth and generate significant increases in average income.
EXPLORING THE FIELD OF SPOKEN ENGLISH THROUGH A PAY-FOR-SUCCESS SOLUTION
Poor learning outcomes in English are negatively impacting millions of youth in India
Spoken English is a critical skill required to participate in the job market and be gainfully employed. In India, English language skills are poor as only 58% of youth aged 14-18 can read simple sentences and of those who can read, roughly only 80% understand the meaning of the sentences read.
What are the challenges?
- Due to a lack of skilled English teachers, children do not get an opportunity to learn this vital skill at school.
- Out of school, English is not widely spoken or heard, especially in rural settings.
Designing the solution
- Social Finance is exploring programs to improve spoken English and establish an outcome pricing mechanism
- We are partnering with reputed EdTech partners who specialise in teaching English-as-a-second-language
- Our aim is to showcase the effectiveness of EdTech integration to improve learning outcomes and to a successfully scale-up such programs through outcomes-based funding
VALUE
PROPOSITION OF IEOF
VALUE
PROPOSITION OF IEOF
IEOF is not an individual impact bond provider.
IEOF is an outcomes fund focused on long-term systemic change. It will structure and launch multiple impact bonds or pay-for-success contract in parallel and at scale (across the five focus areas- ECE, primary, secondary, school-to-work, and inclusive) to achieve a set of pre-defined outcomes while reducing transaction costs and risks often associated with individuals impact bonds.
Benefits of moving to this approach include:
- Centralised contracting capability: Build a better understanding of contracting for outcomes, and provide a focal point to develop contracting expertise as well as lowering transaction costs.
- Integrated, coordinated interventions: Allows for an integrated, holistic approach to addressing social challenges, and coordinated funding for multiple providers based on an overarching strategy aligned to Government priorities.
- Sustainable funding: Act as a longer-term source of funding, providing increased stability and capacity to delivery organisations.
- Knowledge-building: Act as a platform for knowledge-building beyond one-off projects, which can have significant influence in informing future policy and approaches
The ultimate goal of IEOF is to migrate towards a “rate card approach,” another paradigm shift in how social programs are financed in India.
WHY DO WE NEED
A NEW APPROACH
WHY DO WE NEED
A NEW APPROACH
Way too often, non-state actors fund education organizations in a fragmented and restrictive manner, that is not aligned to the national agenda. At Social Finance India, we believe that in order to create significant social change, and we need to facilitate technical experts to work at scale in conjunction with government priorities. We believe that fragmented philanthropic funding will not achieve India’s national achievement goals.
India’s education budget is less than half of what is needed
01
State government spending is earmarked
02
Non-state providers work at a small-scale
03
There is inadequate attention to skilling the ecosystem
04
Philanthropic giving focuses on delivery over design
05
Government bureaucracy makes it a challenge to scale programs
06
Indian education sector and skilling needs a new partnership model centered on success, that will:
Build capacity
of service providers
through enhancing delivery readiness and absorptive capacity to deliver quality programs at scale, with robust data management, reporting, leadership and delivery mechanisms
Build transparency
and adaptability
in the implementation of education programming to allow for data-driven flexibility in program delivery.
Build a knowledge
and data repository
from independent third-party outcome assessments of funded programs to disseminate widely and inform future design through identifying innovative and effective programming.
Catalyze
innovative finance
to reduce transaction costs of education programs at scale through a portfolio of impact bond products to collectively channel $1 billion in to education program delivery.
Mobilize
government resources
to create sustainable, main-stream systems.
OUR
STAKEHOLDERS
OUR
STAKEHOLDERS
Outcomes Funders
Come together to deepen their impact by paying for long-term, sustainable outcomes, after they are achieved – transferring delivery risk to the private sector, and improving overall program performance and value for money.
Investors
Provide upfront working capital investments where required, and support the education organizations to build capacity and deliver better results. They achieve a measurable impact, as and when an uncorrelated financial return.
Education Organizations
Work with a new rigor to deliver to outcomes (rather than inputs) – with the flexibility and support to innovate and adapt based on what is working on the ground, in collaboration with other providers.
Government
Will be a key partner in every project, ensuring funding and programs are aligned with their policy priorities. They will co-fund outcomes, support enabling environment, and with our support build capacity to commission for outcomes.