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Governments need to go for world-class quality in their education systems says OECD; Total education spending in Ireland doubled in period 1995-2007
By Finfacts Team
Sep 8, 2010 - 4:41 AM
Change in unemployment rate for the 15-29 year-old population (2008-09)
Governments need to go for world-class quality in
their education systems to ensure long-term economic growth, according to the
2010 edition of the OECD’s annual Education
at a Glance. Total education spending in Ireland doubled in period
1995-2007.
“In a global economy, it is no longer
improvement by national standards alone. The best performing education systems
internationally provide the benchmark for success,”
said OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría launching the report in Paris.
“With the worldwide recession continuing
to weigh on employment levels, education is an essential investment for
responding to the changes in technology and demographics that are re-shaping
labour markets.”
The think-tank for governments said recent experience demonstrates the value of
investing in education. During the economic downturn, young people with low
levels of education were hard hit, with unemployment rates for those that had
not completed high school rising by almost five percentage points in OECD
countries between 2008 and 2009.
For people with tertiary degrees, by contrast, the increase in unemployment
levels during the same period was below two percentage points.
“Good education increases
employability,” Gurría said.
“In countries hit early by the recession, people with lower levels of education
had more difficulties finding and keeping a job.”
With demand for tertiary courses rising,
according to analysis in this year’s edition of Education at a Glance, public
resources invested in university education also pay off handsomely by bringing
in additional tax revenues.
On average across OECD countries, a man with a
tertiary level of education will generate USD 119 000 more in income taxes and
social contributions over his working life than someone with just an upper
secondary level of education.
Even after taking account of the cost to the
public exchequer of financing degree courses, higher tax revenues and social
contributions from people with university degrees make tertiary education a good
long-term investment.
Net of the cost of degree courses, the
long-term gain to the public exchequer averages USD 86 000 in OECD countries,
almost three times the amount of public investment per student in tertiary
education. Overall returns are even larger, as many benefits of education are
not directly reflected in tax income (Table
A8.4).
Education at a Glance provides a rich, comparable
and up-to-date array of indicators on the performance of education systems and
their implications in policy discussions. The indicators look at who
participates in education, what is spent on it, how education systems operate
and what results are achieved.
Ireland
The report shows that in 2007, the
on average, OECD countries spend 6.2% of GDP on education.
Spending was above 7% in Denmark, Iceland, the United
States, Israel and the Russian Federation, but at
or below 4.5% in Italy and the Slovak Republic. Ireland spent
4.7% on education compared with 5.2 per cent of GDP in 1995.
Ireland also one of the few
countries to reduce spending on higher education at a time when
student numbers were increasing dramatically.
However, spending in Ireland on all levels of education combined
doubled between 1995 and 2007, but GDP rose even faster. As a result,
expenditure as a proportion of GDP fell.
University Rankings
American institutions dominate the latest university rankings
list taking 31 out of the top 100 places in the
QS world university rankings.
The world university rankings by Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) show
TCD dropping from 43 in 2009 to 52, while UCD moves from 89 to 114.
UCC climbs to 184 from 207; NUI Galway is up to 232 from 243
while DCU slips from 279 to 330. UL and NUI Maynooth are ranked between 400 and
500.
In the latest
world rankings
published by Shanghai's Jiao Tong University last month, TCD is in the 200-300
group, UCD in the 300-400 group.
Among other points, the 2010 edition of
Education at a Glance reveals that:
On average across OECD countries, 35% of
25-34 year-olds have completed tertiary education, compared with 20% of
55-64 year-olds. Korea, Canada and Japan are in the lead, along with the
Russian Federation, which is a candidate for OECD membership, all with
over 50% of 25-34 year olds with tertiary qualifications (Chart
A1.1).
Unemployment rates among people with a
tertiary level of education have stayed at or below 4% on average across
OECD countries during the recession. For people who failed to complete
upper secondary education, by contrast, unemployment rates have
repeatedly exceeded 9% (Table
A6.4a).
Employers spend nearly twice as much on
average in OECD countries to employ an experienced person with tertiary
education, compared with a person in the same 45-54 year-old age group
who has not completed upper secondary school (Table
A10.4).
Methods of financing tertiary education vary
considerably between countries, with more than 60% of costs covered from
private sources in Chile, Japan, Korea, the U.K. and the U.S., compared
with less than 10% in Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Iceland and Norway (Table
B3.2b).
As more and more people look beyond their
home countries’ borders for university education, both academic and
commercial benefits accrue from attracting foreign students. In 2008,
the latest year for which complete figures are available, over 3.3
million tertiary students were enrolled outside their country of
citizenship, an increase of 10.7% increase from 2007 (Box
C2.1).
New players are emerging in an increasingly
competitive market for international education. The Russian Federation
expanded its market share by two percentage points over the past decade
and Australia, Korea and New Zealand each by one percentage point. Over
the same period, the share of the U.S. dropped from 26% to 19%, and
Germany, the United Kingdom and Belgium also lost ground (Chart
C2.3).
The largest numbers of international
students are from China and India. China accounts for 17% of all
international students enrolled in OECD countries (not including an
additional 1% from Hong Kong, China), with 21.6% of international
students from China going to the U.S. and 15.3% to Japan (Table
C2. 7).
Women in most countries and at most
education levels still earn much less than men, potentially discouraging
women from making full use of the skills they have learned and hampering
economic growth. On average in OECD countries, a woman aged between 35
and 44 with upper secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary education
can expect to earn 76% of male earnings. This ratio falls to 74% for
those who have not completed an upper secondary education and to 71% for
those who have completed a tertiary education (Table
A7.3a).
Adults with higher educational attainment
are more likely to participate in formal and/or non-formal education
than adults with lower attainment. On average for the OECD, individuals
with tertiary education have an advantage in the involvement in
educational activities – they are almost three times more likely to be
involved in educational activities than those with low levels of
education (Table
A5.1b).
Teachers are still paid less than other
people with similar educational qualifications in most countries. Only
in Spain does a lower secondary teacher with 15 years of experience earn
more than the average for people with tertiary education. On average
across OECD countries, a teacher at this level can expect to earn 79% of
the average. In the Czech Republic, Hungary, Iceland, Israel, Italy and
Slovenia, this ratio falls below 60% (Table
D3.1).
The
Paris- -based OECD (Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development) think
thank for governments has 33 mainly developed country members: Australia,
Austria, Belgium, Canada, Chile, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France,
Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Israel, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Korea,
Luxembourg, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, the
Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the United
Kingdom and the United States.