1 / 24

Structure of Presentation: 1. Background 2. Levels of Education—A Comparison of Countries

The Key Role of Education in Employment and Competitiveness THE LISBON STRATEGY AND THE TRADE UNIONS ROLE PARTNERSHIP FOR BETTER JOBS Lisbon, 7 th March 2008. Structure of Presentation: 1. Background 2. Levels of Education—A Comparison of Countries 3. Education and Employment

torn
Download Presentation

Structure of Presentation: 1. Background 2. Levels of Education—A Comparison of Countries

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. The Key Role of Education in Employment and CompetitivenessTHE LISBON STRATEGY AND THE TRADE UNIONS ROLEPARTNERSHIP FOR BETTER JOBSLisbon, 7th March 2008

  2. Structure of Presentation: 1. Background 2. Levels of Education—A Comparison of Countries 3. Education and Employment 4. Education and Competitiveness 5. Education and Social Cohesion • How to achieve higher quality of education? • Conclusion

  3. 1. Background • With only two more years left it is clear that the European Union has missed the goal to become the most competitive Economy by 2010. • All three Lisbon goals will not be achieved: i) Employment rate is less than 70%, ii) Growth rates have decreased, iii) no significant increases in social cohesion due to growing income inequalities • Education plays a key role in all three objectives

  4. 2. Levels of Education—A Comparison of Countries

  5. Figure 1Average Years of Schooling(25+) Source: Barro and Lee data (2000) – Authors Estimations

  6. Figure 2Average Years of Schooling (25+) – Regime Typologies Source: Barro and Lee data (2000) – Authors Estimations

  7. Figure 3Mean Score in “Science” in 2007 PISA Test Source: OECD data – Authors Estimations

  8. Figure 4Average Years of Schooling (15+) Source: Barro and Lee data (2000) – Authors Estimations

  9. Figure 5Achievement in Education (Post Secondary, 15+) Source: Barro and Lee data (2000) – Authors Estimations

  10. Figure 6Achievement in Education (Post Secondary, 15+) – Inclusion of USA Source: Barro and Lee data (2000) – Authors Estimations

  11. 3. Education and Employment • The most visible Lisbon target, and in principle the one most susceptible to be influenced by policy remains the goal to reach an employment rate of 70 % (by the year 2010). In 2000 the implicit benchmark for the EU in setting the goal of an employment rate of 70 % was the US, which had attained this value at that time. • Over the last years the employment rate (those employed as a percentage of the working age population) has indeed increased, by almost about 4 percentage points, from around 62 to 66%, (for the EU-15). • However progress has been too slow to put the Lisbon target within reach by the end of the decade. Another 20 millions jobs would have to be created to reach the goal.

  12. Table 1 A rough Trans-Atlantic comparison Source: Eurostat and OECD Labour force survey – CEPS Estimations

  13. Table 2What has improved since Lisbon? Share of Population Share of Employment 1999 2004 Change 1999 2004 Change Below 39.4 35.6 -3.8 49.6 49.2 -0.4 Secondary Secondary42.3 43.8 +1.5 69.0 70.1 +1.1 Tertiary 18.3 20.6 +2.3 81.8 82.5 +0.7 Overall NA NA NA 62.0 64.5 +2.5 Source: Eurostat and OECDLabour force survey – CEPS Estimations

  14. Figure 7 Employment rate with respect to Levels of Education in EU15 Source: Eurostat - Authors Estimations

  15. Key Findings • The tables show that the key problem of Europe in terms of employment is not so much the regulation of its labour markets, but the insufficient skill levels of its population. • The small improvement in the overall employment ratio that has taken place since Lisbon can mostly be explained by an ongoing change in the skill composition of Europe’s labour force. Labour market reform does not seem to have had any impact on employment ratios. Since the Lisbon reform the levels of education have stagnated. • If the European work force had the same skill composition as the US (or some more advanced member countries) the employment rate in Europe could easily reach the Lisbon goal even without any labour market reforms. Even with rather rigid labour markets it leads to higher employment.

  16. 4. Education and Competitiveness • Societies are more and more knowledge driven • Especially tertiary education is the key to R&D and overall technological progress, more engineers and natural scientist have to be trained for future economic prosperity. A degree of 30% of the population having tertiary education is necessary to successfully increase the R&D budget to 3% • Education plays a key role in explaining the international variation of economic growth rates, in a global perspective but especially in the highly developed countries (OECD and EU)

  17. Figure 8Partial Regression Plot – Human Capital and Economic Growth Source: OECD - Authors Estimations

  18. 5. Education and Social Cohesion • Besides associational density and income inequality, education plays an important role in explaining levels of interpersonal trust in a cross-section of countries • Interpersonal trust can be regarded as a good proxy for the Lisbon goal of social cohesion

  19. Figure 9Scatter Plot between Education and Social Cohesion Source: WVS - Authors Estimations

  20. 6. How to achieve higher quality of education?

  21. Figure 10 Total Expenditure on Education and Student Achievement Source: OECD - CEPS Estimations

  22. Figure 11 Government Effectiveness and Student Achievement Source: OECD - CEPS Estimations

  23. 7. CONCLUSION • Stocks and quality of human capital varies substantially in the European Union. Especially the Mediterranean countries have low levels education and are achieving only low results in the PISA tests. • Education plays a key role in increasing the Employment rate in the European Union. Labour market reforms are important but further investment in human capital is more important • Education plays a key role in explaining long-term economic growth. Countries with higher stocks and quality of education are growing faster and are more competitive, with respect to the process of globalization • Education is important for fostering social cohesion • Government efficiency is an important factor for the quality of the education

  24. 1, Place du Congrès B – 1000 Brussels Tel: +32 2 229 3911 Fax: +32 2 219 4151 http://www.ceps.eu CEPS, 1 Place du Congrès, 1000 Brussels, +32 2 229 3911, www.ceps.eu

More Related