The Impact of Falling Rolls on English Church Schools Part I. The National Picture

1986 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 161-167
Author(s):  
Stephen L. Bristow
1991 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 324-335 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leslie J. Francis ◽  
David W. Lankshear

2019 ◽  
Vol 55 ◽  
pp. 545-560
Author(s):  
Grant Masom

In 1902 elementary school provision in Oxford diocese – England's largest – reflected the national picture: 72 per cent were church schools, with total rolls of 54 per cent of school-age children. The bitterly contested 1902 Education Act apparently protected the future of church schools, but in practice its provisions severely undermined them, particularly in growing areas of the country. By 1929, Oxford's assistant bishop reported the schools’ situation as ‘critical’. This article examines the impact on the church schools of one rural deanery in South Buckinghamshire, between the 1902 and 1944 Education Acts. Several schools found themselves under threat of closure, while rapid population increase and a rising school leaving age more than quadrupled the number of school-age children in the area. Closer working with the local education authority and other denominations was one option to optimize scarce resources and protect the Church of England's influence on religious education in day schools: but many churchmen fought to keep church schools open at all costs. This strategy met with limited success: by 1939 the proportion of children in church schools had decreased to 10 per cent, with potential consequences for how religion was taught to the other 90 per cent of children.


1990 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 117-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leslie J. Francis ◽  
David W. Lankshear

Significance The collapse of world oil prices has brought fiscal policy sharply into focus in Ecuador. At a time when the budget deficit is widening and the opposition is strengthening, the government faces the prospect of receiving significantly less income from the oil sector than anticipated. The fallout from the plunge of oil prices coincides with the beginning of the constitutional debate that could allow the re-election of President Rafael Correa in 2017. Impacts The government will intensify efforts to raise oil output in a bid to ease the impact of falling oil prices. Conflicts between central and local government will probably increase as public resources become scarcer. If oil prices remain low, the appeal of exiting dollarisation and establishing full control over monetary policy will rise.


Subject Nigeria's forex dynamics Significance The multiple exchange rate regime of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has been vindicated by the naira’s stability over the last nine months. However, the ongoing segmentation of the foreign exchange (forex) market means that each of its windows now has its own set of fundamental drivers, blunting the ability of rising dollar inflows from high oil prices to bring currency appreciation. While this arrangement benefits imports as the government implements its capital-intensive economic recovery plan, it comes at the expense of non-oil private sector growth which has struggled to maintain upward momentum since the end of the recession last year. Impacts The CBN’s decision to hold its main interest rate at a record 14% signals lingering concerns over IEFX outflows ahead of the 2019 elections. The government’s push to re-balance its debt profile by increasing the ratio of external debt will weigh on the naira’s long-term outlook. The impact of falling inflation on the naira is ambiguous given existing import bans and the lack of monetary policy response from the CBN.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily Morris ◽  
Amy Angel ◽  
Noé Hernández

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