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Expanding higher education might solve rising
youth unemployment and widening inequality in Africa
Developing countries often face two well-known
structural problems: high youth unemployment and high inequality. In recent
decades, policymakers have increased the share of government spending on
education in developing countries to address both of these issues. The
empirical literature offers mixed results on which type of education is most
suitable to improve gainful employment and reduce inequality: is it primary,
secondary, or tertiary education? Investigating recent literature on the
returns to education in selected developing countries in Africa can help to
answer this question.
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Education benefits individuals, but the societal benefits are
likely even greater
Formal schooling increases earnings and provides other
individual benefits. However, societal benefits of education may exceed individual benefits.
Research finds that higher average education levels in an area are correlated with higher
earnings, even for local residents with minimal education. Science, technology, engineering,
and mathematics (STEM) graduates appear to generate especially strong external effects, due to
their role in stimulating innovation and economic growth. Several strategies to test for
causality find human capital externalities do exist.
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Increased stakes in educational achievement
explain why today’s anxious parents engage in intensive parenting styles
Parents now engage in much more intensive
parenting styles compared to a few decades ago. Today’s parents supervise
their children more closely, spend more time interacting with them, help
much more with homework, and place more emphasis on educational achievement.
More intensive parenting has also led to more unequal parenting: highly
educated parents with high incomes have increased their parenting
investments the most, leading to a growing “parenting gap” in society. These
trends can contribute to declining social mobility and further exacerbate
rising inequality, which raises the question of how policymakers should
respond.
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Policies to tackle wage inequality should focus
on skills alongside reform of labor market institutions
Policymakers in many OECD countries are
increasingly concerned about high and rising inequality. Much of the
evidence (as far back as Adam Smith’s The Wealth of
Nations) points to the importance of skills in tackling wage
inequality. Yet a recent strand of the research argues that (cognitive)
skills explain little of the cross-country differences in wage inequality.
Does this challenge the received wisdom on the relationship between skills
and wage inequality? No, because this recent research fails to account for
the fact that the price of skill (and thus wage inequality) is determined to
a large extent by the match of skill supply and demand.
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Additional female educational attainment
generally lowers fertility, but the relationship is complex
The negative correlation between women's
education and fertility has been observed across regions and time, although
it is now weaker among high-income countries. Women's education level could
affect fertility through its impact on women's health and their physical
capacity to give birth, children's health, the number of children desired,
and women's ability to control birth and knowledge of different birth
control methods. Each of these mechanisms depends on the individual,
institutional, and country circumstances experienced. Their relative
importance may change along a country's economic development process.
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Mothers'primary school completion significantly improves child and infant health and reduces teenage fertility
There is a strong link between mothers’ primary school completion (8 or more years of schooling) and better socioeconomic outcomes, such as improved child health and reduced teenage fertility, but establishing causality is challenging. A 1997 compulsory schooling law in Turkey, which extended education from five to eight years, provides a natural experiment to identify causal effects. Empirical evidence suggests that increased female education from such reform significantly improves many socioeconomic outcomes of mothers and their children. While suggested mechanisms include changes in healthcare services utilization and risky pregnancy behaviors, such as smoking, thorough investigation of underlying channels is lacking.
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Economic growth determines a nation’s long-term
economic well-being and crucially depends on skills
Politicians typically focus on short-term
economic issues; but, a nation’s long-term economic well-being is directly
linked to its rate of economic growth. In turn, its growth rate is directly
linked to the economically relevant skills of its population. Until
recently, however, economists have found it hard to confirm this through
empirical analysis because of difficulties in measuring the skills of
different societies. International tests of mathematics and science
achievement now offer reliable measures of a population’s relevant cognitive
skills.
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Raising future expected monetary gains to
schooling and poor families’ current incomes promotes school enrollment in
developing countries
Universal completion of secondary education by
2030 is among the targets set by the United Nations’ Sustainable Development
Goals. Higher expected adult wages traced to schooling may play a major role
in reaching this target as they are predicted to induce increased school
enrollment for children whose families wish to optimally invest in their
children’s future. However, low incomes and the obligation to meet immediate
needs may forestall such investment. Studies suggest that school enrollment
in developing countries is positively correlated with higher expected future
wages, but poor families continue to under-enroll their children.
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Changes in compulsory schooling laws have
significant effects on certain population groups, but are costly to
implement
Compulsory schooling laws are a common policy
tool to achieve greater participation in education, particularly from
marginalized groups. Raising the compulsory schooling requirement forces
students to remain in school which, on balance, is good for them in terms of
labor market outcomes such as earnings. But the usefulness of this approach
rests with how the laws affect the distribution of years of schooling, and
the wider benefits of the increase in schooling. There is also evidence that
such a policy has an intergenerational impact, which can help address
persistence in poverty across generations.
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Better educated parents invest more time and
money in their children, who are more successful in the labor market
Governments invest a lot of money in education,
so it is important to understand the benefits of this spending. One
essential aspect is that education can potentially make people better
parents and thus improve the educational and employment outcomes of their
children. Interventions that encourage the educational attainment of
children from poorer families will reduce inequality in current and future
generations. In addition to purely formal education, much less expensive
interventions to improve parenting skills, such as parental involvement
programs in schools, may also improve child development.
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