Does government spending on education promote economic growth?
- Written by: The Conversation Contributor
Economic growth is driven by new ideas, by discoveries that result in better products and more efficient production technologies.
Human capital is the engine of this process: a better educated labour force increases the return on research and development and ensures that discoveries are more readily absorbed in the productive structure of the economy. In the end, more education equals more economic growth.
Or so goes the theory.
In practice, researchers and policymakers have often questioned the effective aggregate return of spending on education.
Simply put, the question is: does government spending on education promote economic growth?
Some stylised facts
Using data available from The World Bank’s World Development Indicators (WDI) database, it is possible to estimate the bivariate relationship between government education expenditure and GDP across a large sample of countries.
The estimates show that for every dollar the government spends on education, GDP grows on average by $20.
When the estimate is run for Australia only, the multiplier is slightly higher: an extra $1 of education expenditure increases Australian GDP by $21.
While intuitively appealing, these results raise some questions. An obvious concern is that a country with a larger GDP must also spend more on education. This introduces the risk of reverse causality; that is, the model might pick the effect of GDP size on education expenditure and not vice-versa.
The graph below somewhat addresses this limitation.
Authors: The Conversation Contributor
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