Role of Disaggregated Education Expenditure on Economic Growth in Nepal

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/irjmmc.v6i2.80646

Keywords:

education expenditure, economic growth, ARDL approach, capital expenditure, recurrent expenditure

Abstract

This study investigates the nexus between education expenditure and economic growth in Nepal using the Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) bounds testing approach for the period 1975-2023. Employing time series data, the research disaggregates education spending into recurrent and capital components to analyze their differential impacts on real GDP growth. The empirical findings reveal a significant long-run cointegrating relationship between education expenditure and economic growth. Capital expenditure in education exhibits a positive and statistically significant coefficient (0.262), while recurrent expenditure shows a negative but statistically insignificant relationship (-0.257). The error correction model indicates rapid adjustment to equilibrium with a coefficient of -1.785, suggesting oscillatory convergence. Gross fixed capital formation demonstrates substantial short-run effects on economic growth. These results underscore the importance of prioritizing strategic investments in educational infrastructure while implementing reforms to enhance the efficiency of recurrent expenditure. The study contributes to education finance policy by providing empirical evidence for optimal resource allocation strategies to foster sustainable economic development in Nepal.

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Author Biographies

Gyan Mani Adhikari, Tribhuvan University

Central Department of Management

Rajendra Adhikari, Tribhuvan University

Mechi Multiple Campus

Santosh Chhetri, Tribhuvan University

Tribhuvan Multiple Campus

Padam Karki, Tribhuvan University

Bhojpur Multiple Campus

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Published

2025-06-27

How to Cite

Adhikari, G. M., Adhikari, R., Chhetri, S., & Karki, P. (2025). Role of Disaggregated Education Expenditure on Economic Growth in Nepal. International Research Journal of MMC (IRJMMC), 6(2), 68–83. https://doi.org/10.3126/irjmmc.v6i2.80646

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Articles