Title: Effectiveness of Education on Economic Development in Asia:
1- Effectiveness of Education on Economic
Development in Asia - A New Policy Modelling Approach for Public
Services Equalisation - 18 Aug 2008Faculty of Economics,Thammasat
University, Bangkok
2 Tran Van Hoa Professor and Director, Vietnam
and East Asia Summit Research ProgramCentre for
Strategic Economic StudiesVictoria University,
Melbourne, VIC 8001, AustraliaEmail
jimmy.tran_at_vu.edu.au Website http//www.staff.vu
.edu.au/CSESBL/
3ABSTRACT
- The paper uses a new endogenous growth regression
model to explore the impact of education on
growth in China and India - To inform debates on public services equalisation
effectiveness and regional competitiveness policy - Under increasing global economic integration,
robust domestic reforms and damaging regional
crises and natural disasters.
4TREND IN MAJOR PUBLIC SERVICES CHINA
5CHINA PUBLIC SERVICES HISTORICAL PATTERN
- Education and Health Largest
- Followed by Administrative Expenses
- Both are Parallel and Rising
- Rural Support Stable
- Pensions Payment Lowest and Slowly Rising
- Innovation, Policy Expenses Falling
6TREND IN MAJOR PUBLIC SERVICES INDIA
7INDIA PUBLIC SERVICES HISTORICAL PATTERN
- Energy Largest but Falling
- Education Low and Slowly Rising
- Health Peaked late 1990s but Falling in
Mid-2000s - Rural Support Stable but Falling
8MEAN (1986-2005) SHARES OF MAJOR SERVICES CHINA
9ITEMS OF NOTE CHINA
- Education and Health Largest
- Followed by Administrative Expenses
- Rural and Innovation-Science-Technology (IST)
Almost Equal Shares - New Tax Burden (Gao 2006)-gt Public Service
Efficiency - Research Focus What are Contributions of
Education Health, Rural and IST Support to
Chinas Growth?
10MEAN (1992-2005) SHARES OF MAJOR SERVICES INDIA
11ITEMS OF NOTE INDIA
- Education Health Expenditure Less Than Half of
the Share in China - Rural Support Similar Share as in China
- Are Indias Public Expenditures Efficient?
- Research Focus What are Contributions of
Education Health, and Rural Support to Indias
Growth?
12DEVELOPMENT GROWTH PATHCHINA INDIA
13EDUCATION DEVELOPMENT CAUSALILTY ISSUES
- Multitude of Growth Theories (Levine Renelt
1992) - Applied Nature of Economic Development (Krueger
2007) - Inherent Interdependent Characteristics of
Activities in Development (Krueger 2007) - Nonlinear Features of Development Causality
Relationship (Minier 2007)
14EXISTING CAUSALITY IMPACT METHODOLOGIES FOR
GROWTH
- Descriptive Analysis
- Correlative and no Testable Causality
- CGE
- Essentially confirmatory in nature
- Growth Regression
- No circular causality or endogeneity specified
- Limitations in Functional Form
- No Country-Specific Characteristics
- Credible Realism for Policy Weak
15ENDOGENOUS EDUCATION-GROWTH THEORY
- Keynesian-SNA93 Income Identity Sources of
Growth YCIGX-IM - Endogenous Education-Growth Regression (TVH 2004,
Edwards 2007) - YY(E,R,FDI,S)
- EE(Y,FDI,X,W,S)
- RR(Y,FDI,X,W,S)
- Taylor Planar Approximations (TVH 1992, Baier
Bergstrand 2008) - Ya1a2Ea3Ra4FDIa5S u
- Eb1b2Yb3Xb4Wb5S e
16Kydlands Data-Model Consistency Criterion
17SUBSTANTIVE FINDINGSEDUCATION-GROWTH CAUSALITY
IN CHINA INDIA
18ARE OUR FINDINGS CREDIBLE?MODELLING CHINA GDP
GDP/HEAD
19ARE OUR FINDINGS CREDIBLE?MODELLING INDIA GDP
GDP/HEAD
20ARE OUR FINDINGS CREDIBLE?MODELLING CHINA
INDIA EDUCATION EXPENDITURES
21IMPLICATIONS FOR EDUCATION REFORMS PUBLIC
SERVICE EQUALISATION IN CHINA 1
- Education Health Strong negative contribution
- Rural Support Weak beneficial impact
- Innovation-Science-Technology Support Strong
negative effect
22IMPLICATIONS FOR EDUCATION REFORMS PUBLIC
SERVICE EQUALISATION IN CHINA 2
- Policy Implications (see also OECD WB 08)
- Support for Education Health Efficiency Reforms
- Support for More Rural Expenditure
- Support for Innovation, Science Technology
Efficiency Reforms - Need for research on Administrative impact on
growth - ODA Beneficial but weak impact on growth
23IMPLICATIONS FOR CHINA INDIA REGIONAL
COMPETITIVENESS 1
- Indias more efficiency in education and health
expenditures - This is exacerbated by their much smaller shares
in public service expenditure - Indias slightly more efficiency in rural support
contribution to growth - This may be attenuated by Indias slightly higher
public expenditure in rural programs
24IMPLICATIONS FOR CHINA INDIA REGIONAL
COMPETITIVENESS 2
- In both countries, good reforms contribute far
more to growth than expenditure on public
services - Indias good reforms achieve higher growth
returns than Chinas. - However, Chinas much higher efficiency in FDI
utilisation (underscoring FDI-led growth)
25IMPLICATIONS FOR INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION (BASIC
SERVICES) EQUALISATION
- OECD-WB Recommend Chinas education expenditure
scale to reach OECD (24) level - Our findings indicate that, while increasing
Chinas expenditure on education is important,
improving education efficiency is a higher
priority - Improving public expenditure share on education
in India however improves its growth