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Human Capital Education and Health in Economic Development
Human Capital Education and Health in Economic Development
Education and
Health in
Economic
Development
The Central Roles of Education and Health
► Education and health are basic objectives of development;
they are important ends in themselves
► Thus, both health and education can also be seen as vital components of growth and
development - as inputs to the aggregate production function
► Their dual role as both inputs and outputs gives health and education their central
importance in economic development
► In 1950, some 280 of every 1,000 children in the developing world as a whole died
before their fifth birthday
► By 2011, that number had fallen to 95 per 1,000 in low-income countries and 46 per
1,000 in middle-income countries (though now compared with 6 per 1,000 in
high-income countries nd just 4 in many European countries)
► Major childhood illnesses such as rubella and polio have been largely controlled
through use of vaccines
► The United Nations reports that although there were still a stagerring 775 million illeterate
people aged 15 and older in the world in 2010, the god news is that 82% of all people are
literate today, compared to just 63% as recently as 1970
► Child mortality is 10 times higher in developing countries than those found in developed
nations
► Human capital - Productive investments embodied in human persons, including skills,
abilities, ideals health, and locations, often resulting from expenditures on education, on
the job training programs, and medical care
Education and Health as joint Investments for
Development
► Health and education are closely related in economic development
► Eventhough the health and education gap between developed and developing
countries remains large and further improvements may prove difficult, the progress to date
has been unmistakable
Improving Health and Education: Why
Increasing Income is not sufficient
► Health and education levels are much higher in high income countries
► With higher income, people and governments can afford to spend more on education
and health
► With greater health and education, higher productivity and incomes are possible
► People will spend more on human capital when income is higher
► But evidence shows clearly that even if we were able to raise incomes without a large
improvement in health and education, we could not count on that income increase being
adequately invest in children’s education and health
► The market will not solve this problem automatically, and in many cases, household
consumption choices themselves may lead to a surprisingly small link between income and
nutrition, especially for children
► Better health and nutrition lead to earlier and longer school enrollment, better school
attendance and more effective learning
► Thus, to improve enrollments and the effectiveness of schooling, we must improve the
health of children in developing countries
► When children under age 15 work, their labor disrupts their schooling
► Compunding this, the health of child workers is significantly worse, their physical stunting
among children laborers is very common
► In addition, many laboring children are subject to especially cruel and exploitative
working conditions (p.289)
The Gender Gap: Discrimination in
Education and Health
► Young females receive less education than young males in most low-income developing
countries
► While youth literacy is now much higher than it was as recently in 1990, the following
figure shows that in most regions, girls still lag behind boys
► Large majorities of illeterate people and those who have been unable to attend school
around developing world are female
► The educational gender gap is especially great in the least developed countries in
Africa,where literacy rates can be less than half that of men in countries as Niger, Mali,
Guinea, and Benin (p. 295)
Questions