1 / 56

Tertiary Education and Economic Growth: The Bank Strategy

Tertiary Education and Economic Growth: The Bank Strategy. Brazil HD Team Seminar 7 February 2006. the future of tertiary education?. outline of the presentation. main messages fit with overall Bank strategy role of the World Bank. main message # 1.

hien
Download Presentation

Tertiary Education and Economic Growth: The Bank Strategy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tertiary Education and Economic Growth: The Bank Strategy Brazil HD Team Seminar 7 February 2006

  2. the future of tertiary education?

  3. outline of the presentation... • main messages • fit with overall Bank strategy • role of the World Bank

  4. main message # 1 • social and economic progress is achieved principally through the advancement and application of knowledge World Development Report 1998/99

  5. knowledge is a key factor in the difference between poverty and wealth

  6. Korea vs. Ghana • Korea • 1950s: • growth of public tertiary education with tuition fees • 1960s: • government financial incentives to promote private tertiary sector growth • 1970s and 80s: • development of science and engineering programs • 1990s: • emphasis on quality assurance, R&D, accountability, performance-based funding

  7. Ghana vs. Korea • Ghana • 1950s – 1970s • slow growth of “free” public tertiary education • 1980s: • initiation of reforms: quality, financial sustainability, expansion of public tertiary education • 1990s: • weak application of reform programs

  8. Korea vs. Ghana • evolution 1960-2000 • enrollment rate • Korea: 5% to 80% • Ghana: remained at 2% • private sector enrollment • Korea: 75% of total • Ghana: 6% of total • public expenditure per student • Korea: increase from $2.700 to $4.500 • Ghana: decrease from $1.200 to $850 • tertiary education linkages with economy and labor market • Korea: strong • Ghana: weak

  9. main message # 2 • to increase national productivity, tertiary education is necessary: • to create, disseminate and apply knowledge • to achieve the MDGs • to build local capacities

  10. Tsunami26 December 2004

  11. disaster preparedness • sismology • vulcanology • climatology (floods, tsunamis, droughts, etc.)

  12. understanding of global issues

  13. main message #3 • tertiary education systems in most developing and transition countries are not adequately prepared to play these roles of knowledge acquisition and capacity building

  14. long-standing challenges • financially sustainable expansion • equity in access • quality and relevance • governance and management

  15. new challenges • new education and training needs • increased competition and emergence of new providers (borderless education) • potential of new information & communication technologies

  16. changing education and training needs • higher skill levels

  17. relative earning gaps are increasing Male Female

  18. changing education and training needs • higher skill levels • flexibility to adapt to change

  19. changes in job task-skill demands in the USA (1960 – 1998) Source: Autor, Levy, and Murnane (2003) “The Skill Content of Recent Technological Change: An Empirical Exploration,” Quarterly Journal of Economics.

  20. PISA results for selected countries OECD Average

  21. changing education and training needs • higher skill levels • flexibility to adapt to change • need for continuing education

  22. from innocence

  23. … to wisdom

  24. 8% 2000 14% 78% 4% 1980 9% 87% 2% 14% 1960 84% South Korea and Brazil 26% 2000 55% 18% 1980 9% 49% 42% 1960 3% 17% 80%

  25. university of the future? continuing education postgraduate studies first degree

  26. new providers • long distance competition • franchise universities • corporate universities • media companies, libraries, museums & secondary schools • education brokers

  27. new forms of competition …

  28. new forms of competition …

  29. new forms of competition …

  30. new challenges • new education and training needs • increased competition and emergence of new providers (borderless education) • potential of new information & communication technologies

  31. TIME same Physical mtgs. Print-on-paper books, journals Hands on labs, shops, studios GEOGRAPHIC PLACE same

  32. TIME different same Physical mtgs. Print-on-paper books, journals Hands on labs, shops, studios Shared notebook Library reserves Time-shared labs, shops, studios same GEOGRAPHIC PLACE AV Conference Web search Online, real time instruments Email Autonomous instruments different

  33. a brave new world • social and economic progress is achieved principally through the advancement and application of knowledge World Development Report 1998/99

  34. main message # 4 • responsibility of the State: to put in place an enabling framework that encourages tertiary institutions to be more innovative and responsive

  35. role of the State • define a coherent national strategic vision and policy framework • establish an enabling regulatory environment • offer appropriate financial incentives

  36. main message # 5 • the World Bank Group can assist client countries by sharing international experience and mobilizing the resources needed to improve their tertiary education systems

  37. outline of the presentation... • main messages • fit with overall Bank strategy

  38. fit with overall Bank strategy tertiary education… • reduces poverty through economic growth • conditions the achievement of most MDGs • strengthens the entire education system

  39. poverty reduction through economic growth • knowledge for development framework (1999 WDR): • macroeconomic incentives & institutional regime • human capital base • information & telecommunication infrastructure • national innovation system

  40. poverty reduction through economic growth • tertiary education contributes to the last two pillars by: • training a qualified and adaptable labor force • generating new knowledge • adapting global knowledge to local use to resolve concrete economic and social problems

  41. supporting agriculture, environment, health and education to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (1990-2015) • Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger • Halve the proportion of people with less than a dollar a day. • Halve the proportion of people who suffer from hunger. 2. Achieve universal primary education • Ensure that boys and girls alike complete primary schooling 3. Promote gender equality and empower women • Eliminate gender disparity at all levels of education.

  42. achieving the Millennium Development Goals (cont’d) • 4. Reduce child mortality • Reduce by two thirds the under-five mortality rate. • 5. Improve maternal health • Reduce by three quarters the maternal mortality ratio. • 6. Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases • Reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS. • 7. Ensure environmental sustainability • 8. Develop a global partnership for development

  43. strengthening the entire education sector to achieve the education MDGs • teacher training & retraining • training of principals and system managers • curriculum development • education research & policy advice

  44. outline of the presentation... • main messages • fit with overall Bank strategy • role of the World Bank

  45. contribution of the World Bank • policy dialogue and knowledge sharing on tertiary education reform • financing and technical assistance to support reforms • enabling framework for global public goods

  46. role of the World Bank policy dialogue and guidance informed by: • understanding of political economy • stakeholder consultations • relevant international experience

More Related