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52 pages 1 hour read

Ha-Joon Chang

23 Things they don't tell you about Capitalism

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 2010

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Thing 17Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Thing 17 Summary: “More Education in Itself Is Not Going to Make a Country Richter”

Free-market economists tend to emphasize education as a necessary prerequisite to economic growth and hold that differences in education account for the difference in economic success between Sub-Saharan Africa and the East Asian countries. In today’s world, they claim, the knowledge gained through education is more important than ever.

Contradicting this view, Chang suggests that little evidence shows that education directly impacts productivity. Many East Asian economies grew rapidly despite having lower literacy rates than the Philippines and Argentina, whose growth has been slow by comparison. Meanwhile, in Sub-Saharan Africa, income per capita has not correlated with increasing literacy rates. Chang suggests that despite social and cultural benefits, most schooling does not directly relate to increased workplace productivity.

Chang considers various counterclaims. To those who argue that the rise of the “knowledge economy” makes education even more vital, Chang points out that this phenomenon is nothing new, even as advanced machinery requires less, not more, of most workers. To those who argue that universities, not primary schools, are most important, Chang points out that having a university degree is more valuable in demonstrating worthwhile qualities to a potential employer than it is in demonstrating job-specific knowledge. Over time, this leads to degree inflation, and more people seek degrees to make themselves stand out, even as the degrees become less meaningful. Chang concludes that although other good reasons exist to support education initiatives, education is not the growth-promoting panacea that free-market economists claim.

Thing 17 Analysis

Returning to the theme of The Path Forward for Developing Countries, Chang highlights yet another initiative that free-market economists erroneously proffer as a kind of shortcut to explosive economic growth: increased access to education. As elsewhere, Chang’s methodology consists of reviewing this belief in the context of the historical record, this time touching on developing countries from around the globe. In one sense, Chang’s dismissing the significance of universities undervalues their contribution (after all, his third essay presents the difference between two countries’ richest, most educated citizens, not their poorest, as a key difference). Nevertheless, this essay fits into his broader recommendations that developing countries focus on the fundamentals of industrialization, including manufacturing and exporting, rather than trying to skip ahead to advanced industries or even knowledge-based sectors.

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