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Private tuition and economic inequality in Spain

Juan Manuel Moreno, UNED; Ángel Martínez, EsadeEcPol
Commissioned research

The market for private tuition in Spain satisfies very different demands that vary between educational stages and households according to their economic capacity. As school pupils advance through the different stages of the education system, it is increasingly more likely that they will receive private tuition and that the composition of that tuition will change. Specifically, the weight of private tuition in core curriculum subjects as a percentage of the total increases between Early Childhood education (20%) and Bachillerato (44%), in the same way that the weight of language tuition increases as household economic capacity grows. In turn, it is found that pupils from households with more resources are more likely to receive more than one type of private tuition, and in a higher volume, which accounts for the greater intensity of spending among these households.
Key points
  • 1
       The Survey on Household Spending on Education (Encuesta del Gasto de los Hogares en Educación, EGHE) offers the most realistic image possible of the dimensions of the private tuition market in Spain. Some 47% of Spanish pupils receive private tuition and their families spent close to 1.7 billion euros on it in the 2019/2020 academic year.
  • 2
       Pupils’ education stage is a determining factor in the amount of spending on private tuition. The average spend per pupil in the 2nd cycle of Early Childhood amounts to €117 against over €400 by Bachillerato (general upper secondary education). This is explained both by an increase in the percentage of pupil users and an increase in the quantity and volume of private tuition received per pupil.
  • 3
       The household’s economic capacity influences the demand for private tuition. Only 22% of the spending by the most affluent classes is devoted to core curriculum subjects against 56% among poorer households. The wealthiest households devote their resources to learning languages and, to a lesser extent, artistic tuition.
  • 4
       Some 33% of more vulnerable pupils take private tuition, in contrast with 57% of pupils from higher-income households.
  • 5
       Differences in participation in private tuition according to economic capacity are greater during compulsory secondary education than in the early education stages (2nd cycle of Early Childhood and Primary).
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