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Literacy rate in Pakistan slips by 2%

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ISLAMABAD: Literacy rate in the country saw an annual drop of 2.0 per cent to 58 per cent during fiscal year 2015-16 — a level last seen in FY2013-14 when the current PML-N government came into power, official figures released on Thursday revealed.

The situation has turned out to be an embarrassment for the federal government as it skipped mentioning figures of FY15 in the Pakistan Economic Survey 2016-17 which were better than the year FY14, just to avoid criticism. This scribe found the missing figures from previous year’s records.

The decline in literacy rate has been witnessed in Sindh, Balochistan and Punjab while it remained stagnant in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P).

The drop is also being termed as a setback for the Ministry of Federal Education and Professional Trainings which had been painting a rosy picture of the education sector.

The literacy rate in Balochistan has fallen to 41 per cent in FY16 as compared to 44 per cent in FY15. Sindh has witnessed a whopping fall of 5.0 per cent to 55 per cent in FY16 as against 60 per cent the previous fiscal. The rate in K-P has remained stagnant at 53 per cent since FY14 while Punjab witnessed a 1.0 per cent decline in the rate as compared to the rate the last fiscal.

Interestingly, the total number of enrolments at the national level during FY16 stood at 46.2 million as compared to 43.9 million during FY15, reflecting an increase of 5.0 per cent.

The urban-rural gulf is still wide in terms of literacy rate – standing at 74 per cent in urban areas and 49 per cent in rural areas, pointing to the widening gap between rural and urban education systems. Moreover, the overall literacy rate among the male and female populations is 81 per cent and 68 per cent respectively. A similar trend is glaring in all provinces.

In Punjab, the total literacy rate is 54 per cent among female population and 59 per cent among male population. In rural areas, the count is 44 per cent for females and 66 per cent for males. And in urban area, it is 73 per cent for females and 82 per cent for males.

Balochistan has 24 per cent female and 56 per cent male literacy rate. The figure is 15 per cent for females and 48 per cent for males in rural areas while in urban, it is 44 per cent and 76 percent for females and males respectively.

K-P’s literacy count is 36 per cent in case of females and 72 per cent in case of males. In rural areas, percentage for females is 33 and males 70. While in urban areas, it is 52 per cent and 77 per cent for females and males respectively.

In Sindh, 44 per cent females and 67 per cent males are literate. In rural areas, it becomes 19 per cent in case of female population and 51 per cent in case of male population. In urban areas, it is 65 per cent and 80 per cent for female and male population respectively.

Public sector expenditure on education as percentage of the gross domestic product (GDP) is increasing at a snail’s pace with an estimation at 2.3 per cent during the FY16 as compared to 2.2 per cent in FY15.

Educationists and national campaigners have been pressing the government to allocate 4.0 per cent of GDP to the education sector. The figure was 2.1 per cent in 2013-14.



Source: https://tribune.com.pk/story/1419396/economic-survey-literacy-rate-pakistan-slips-2/
 
But but, PMLN is the best Govt. we've had in years and Pakistan is a future superpower of the world because of the great Nawaz Sharif!

This is what happens when you lower the already embarrassing budget for education and spend that money on your personal expenses.

Here's an interesting fact: Nawaz Sharif spent 2 times the money on making the Prime Minister house more luxurious than what it already was in ONE year compared to education over his entire tenure.
 
These figures are irrelevant since the desi schools, colleges and unis are churning out extreme and parhay likhay jahil. I would have the literacy drop to 20% but those who come under this literacy bracket should show some signs of literacy. The ministry should focus on improving the education structure rather than trying to inflate the numbers.

In my city you honestly can't tell the difference between a literate and an illiterate person, many times an literate person will give you an impression of a illiterate person. Such literacy can go to hell.
 
Does the population growth of Punjab has any impact on this? Shouldn't matter anyways, it's the job of Punjab government to manage this. Government can so create so many jobs in education sector but who cares about that. Everything in Pakistan is now China's responsibility.
 
Translate this to Urdu for our beloved potwaris , they might start celebrating this to
 
Truly a sad situation.This is what happens when you don't allocate enough funds for the education sector.
 
Drop of 2% in one year? Looks weird. Either the earlier stats were wrong or current stat is wrong.
 
Poor illiterate people tend to have tons of kids who in turn will never go to school.

Its a vicious cycle.
 
Do they know how percentages work,2% is a huge value and it just got decreased in a year?
 
Tajarbati team ka aek aur tohfaa...


Thank you Nawaz Sharif :salute
 
Drop of 2% in one year? Looks weird. Either the earlier stats were wrong or current stat is wrong.

Both.

The definition of "Literacy" varies from country to country. If I put it like - "able to read & comprehend a newspaper in any of the National language (s)" - then this % for IND, PAK & BD will surprise many. Long back, I can recall, Govt. of BD took a program to increase literacy % of the country - so Govt. agents used to travel to villages & taught elderly people how to "draw" their name in Bengali - few might even had broken their pen to do so .................. in quick time literacy reached 65% ......
 
Both.

The definition of "Literacy" varies from country to country. If I put it like - "able to read & comprehend a newspaper in any of the National language (s)" - then this % for IND, PAK & BD will surprise many. Long back, I can recall, Govt. of BD took a program to increase literacy % of the country - so Govt. agents used to travel to villages & taught elderly people how to "draw" their name in Bengali - few might even had broken their pen to do so .................. in quick time literacy reached 65% ......

I can see some motivation by ruling parties to have increase in literacy rate by diluting the cut off, but no one will have incentive to let it drop by 2%. That's a huge number in one year. I do get your point though. Past and current numbers may not be reliable enough to draw any good conclusion.
 
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