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The role of education in economic growth Evelyn Chew (66388) Le Hong Hanh (6112) Overview Widely research topic in economics literature Education play a role in affecting economic growth both directly and indirectly Great investment at micro level but on macro level there are some doubts on benefits Measures Economic Growth • Institution framework of the economy • Openness of the economy • Security of property rights • Geography • Fertility • Gross Domestic Product Measures Quantity of Education • Average years of schooling across working-age population Quality of Education • Average performance for standardized tests (Trends in international mathematics and Science study (TIMSS) and Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA)) • Teachers’ wages, educational program evaluations, spending on education Public VS Private Spending Public Spending • Spending by the government • 83% of all funds for educational institutions comes from Public (OECD) • Increased across all levels from 2000-2008 Private Spending • Spending by businesses or privately owned companies • Increased in more than three-quarter of the countries as well Literature Review Solow (1956) • Economic growth affected positively by the increase in technological progress in addition to Factors of production Mankiw, Romer and Weil (1992) • Education increases the human capital inherent in the labor force which increases labor productivity and thus transitional growth towards a higher equilibrium level of output Aghion and Howitt (1998) • Education might increase the innovative capacity of the economy, along with increasing knowledge on new technologies and products Literature review Liu and Armer (1993) Mc Mahon (1998) Aubvn (2009) • Found that both primary and junior-high achievement variables add explanatory power to economic growth in Taiwan • Senior-high and college education did not exert any effect on growth • Higher level of education impact growth negatively across a sample of Asian countries • Higher education have a small negative effect on GDP of Portugal Theoretical approaches • Neoclassical growth theories • Theories of Endogenous growth • Theory of Economic Growth Neoclassical growth theories (1) Solow model: Y= f (K, AL) Where Y is output, K is capital and L is labor and A is measurement of the level of technology. AL is labor force measured in efficiency units, which incorporate both the amount of labor and the productivity of labor as determined by the available technology Neoclassical growth theories (2) The production function exhibits constant returns to both inputs. One of functions satisfying these assumptions is the Cobb-Douglas production function: Where 0<a<1. Neoclassical growth theories (3) Let a dot over a variable denotes changes per unit of time Where s is rate of saving, δ is the rate at which the capital depreciates, k is capital stock per efficiency units. Technology and population growth at a constant exogenous rate, equal to and n respectively. Neoclassical growth theories (4) The transition period and the steady-state in Solow model Neoclassical growth theories (5) In the Mankiw, Romer and Weil (1992) model, human capital (H) become important in their model: Where .Let sK be the income share spent on physical capital accumulation (that is the saving rate) and sH be the income share spent on human capital accumulation Neoclassical growth theories (6) Theories of Endogenous growth(1) Let fi is the production function of an individual firm: Where ai is the level of knowledge of an individual firm, ki represents other factors of production (capital, labor, etc.), and A is the general level of knowledge in the economy. We assume that other inputs are constant. The production function shows a increasing returns with respect to all inputs (a,k,A) and constant returns with respect to a and k: Theories of Endogenous growth(2) Since, all the firms are identical: At the individual firm’s level : At the social (whole economy) level: Marginal knowledge of products, technology, etc. at the social level is increasing while the firm's point of view it is decreasing or constant: Theory of Economic Growth(1) This is the other version of the innovation-based growth theory known as the "Schumpeterian" theory developed by Agion and Howitt (1992) and Grossman and Helpman (1991). In Schumpeteriam theory aggregate output is again produced by a continuum of intermediate products: Where L is the aggregate supply of labor (assumed to be constant), x(i) is the flow input of intermediate product. There is a fixed measure of product variety, normalized to unity, and each intermediate product i has a separate productivity parameter A(i). Theory of Economic Growth (2) An innovation in sector i consists of a new version whose productivity parameter A(i) exceeds that of the previous version by the fixed factor The growth rate of A(i) is: Therefore the expected growth rate of A(i) is: Theory of Economic Growth (3) Another model is growth accounting with the formula: Theory of Economic Growth (4) Labor (L), physical capital (K), human capital (H) and TFP contribution to economic growth in Poland, 2005-2011: Empirical approaches • The quality of schooling and economic growth • The importance of cognitive skills for economic growth The quality of schooling and economic growth (1) Each year of schooling is associated with a long-run growth increase of 0.58% percentage points The quality of schooling and economic growth (2) Model 1: Pooled OLS, using 90 observations Included 30 cross-sectional units Time-series length = 3 Dependent variable: Growth rate of GDP Robust (HAC) standard errors Coefficient Std. Error t-ratio p-value const 2.18506 1.6456 1.3278 0.18768 School attainment 0.110882 0.146329 0.7578 0.45062 R-squared 0.004352 Adjusted R-squared -0.006962 F(1, 88) 0.384681 P-value(F) 0.536712 The quality of schooling and economic growth (3) The importance of cognitive skills for economic growth(1) The importance of cognitive skills for economic growth(2) The returns to cognitive skills are generally strong across countries Education negatively affect Economic Growth Sorting Theory Stiglitz (1975) • Education serves as a filter rather than an investment • Sorts individuals into different categories not in line with their competitive advantage (efficiency loss) • Individuals with good grades or higher education level seen as highly skilled • Market pay workers accordingly to their marginal product • No differentiation made, individuals receive wages equal to the mean productivity of the population Education negatively affect Economic Growth Education Institution limits • Individuals uninformed about their own abilities and hence what they should earn • Developing countries eg. Liberia • Educational institutions not fulfilling their social marginal product of finding each individual’s comparative advantage • Not rewarded for their comparative skills Education negatively affect Economic Growth • Between developing and developed • In 2010, average Kenya student spent more years in schooling than an average French had in 1985 Learning Gap • Kenya’s GDP per capita in 2010 was only 7% of France’s GDP then Reasons • Quality of education received is lower • Students not learning as much • Eg. India, increase in school enrollment from 82% to 87% in 2011. Proportion of students who could do long division fell from 70% to 57% Results • Varying returns to education due to this learning gap • Eg. In US, college degree lets you earn $24000 more than those who do not have but in Nigeria its only $200 more Discussion Increase competition Introduce opportunities • Introducing independently operated schools to increase education quality • Increase private spending on education • Eg. Share of students attending independent school in Netherlands raise annual growth rate by 0.92pp • For those who have an education to use skills they learn • Difference in wages for college graduate due to lack of demand for them Conclusion Education positively affects economic growth No fix solutions to tackle issues where education affects negatively More research needs to be done on finding how education reforms can improve EG