Hi Lucy, thank you for contribution to the EA forum. I’m sorry it’s been a frustrating experience for you.
Some questions that came to my mind when reading your post were:
Agreed that there is no straight line from money to wellbeing, but if it *is* possible to invest a relatively small amount of money to generate a relatively large amount of money for the global poor, then that surely seems like a good thing?
I don’t recognise your characterisation of GiveWell’s views on the importance of money vs life. As I understand it, GiveWell’s moral weights consider saving the life of an infant to be around 50x more valuable than doubling consumption for one person for one year, and that rises to 80x if the life saved is of someone aged over 5. (source: GiveWell CEA, August 2019 version, ‘Moral Weights’ tab)
I do agree with your assertion that improving wealth is not sufficient or necessary to improve wellbeing, and wellbeing is what we should care about. However I think I’m missing something about how this comment is adding something of value to this post. (note that I have not downvoted this post, and can’t promise that those who have downvoted have been thinking the same thing as me)
but if it is possible to invest a relatively small amount of money to generate a relatively large amount of money for the global poor, then that surely seems like a good thing?
Specifically on this one, trade is one of the fundamental ways countries interact in the world, and how they internally structure their societies. Thats a lot of power, and getting it wrong, can mean a lot of harm. Also if US decides to make give favorable terms to (say) India, it means that the constituency that is paying the cost is dilute and not so powerful, powerful interests would try to stop anything that reduces their power. There is a long ugly history of powerful actors giving nice cover stories “civilizing”, “free trade” and doing extraordinary harm.
50x to 80x more valuable than doubling consumption for one person for one year
I read it as:
if 80 people double their income for one year ~= 1 life
move 90 people people from bangladesh to india for one year
== 90 * 7000 / (2*3900) ~= 1 life???
if they live another 50 years in india == 50 lifes????
Ignoring discounting a simpler way to think of it is: if a persons income doubles for life then ~~== an extra life???
I find this morality hard to swallow. If this seems moral to you, please explain how.
I want to be an order of magnitude away at least, say 500 − 1000 person years of double income is approx 1 life.
Why was my original post relevant: here is my thinking
First, the post basis itself on givewell moral weights if they are off by 10, then the estimate is off by 10. So cost become $180 * 10 ~= which is in the same ballpark as other give well charities.
Second, EA community is dominated by thinking about poverty, and influence from economists, does another post on trade really add value? Is the author aware of the exceptions to money = well being rule?
Also read
About downvoting:
If you had downvoted along with any comment, I would have been thrilled. Mostly I get anonymous downvotes, which is hard to take. When I look at voting on my comments I see that I end up at zero, or negative, but unusually more people vote on the comment. This is an indicator that I am controversial, so a learning opportunity for either me or the down voters.
It is somewhat intimidating when I see that people who work at EA organizations have mostly gone to the best universities. (I did not go to one)
Thank you very much for the debate (I do not mean to put a stop to it, on the contrary).
Lucy, to explain the situation, it is possible that the downvotes stem from your form of writing. Maybe people expect that you write a draft, revise it, proofread it, revise again, see if it flows well, reread to see if you are making a clear and convincing argument, consider counter-propositions, incorporate them into your post, and finally truncate the post to about a third of the original writing. In this way, you save effort to the readers (who may themselves revise their posts) and thus the readers may perceive equality in the effort of knowledge-building on this forum. Otherwise, readers may not wish to exert the effort of trying to understand the arguments which are presented unclearly. However, this is just my perspective.
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Yes, in theory, because of the collective action problem, concentrated interest groups outcompete diffuse interests. Here, however, the concentrated interests could wish India to keep its GSP status: this would make imported inputs for U.S. companies cheaper. By withdrawing the GSP status, the U.S. government is hurting both U.S. consumers and producers, who depend on inputs from India.
Of course, greater sharing of power would reduce the problems of global inequality. This is why effective altruism should be promoted among powerful groups, such as trade professionals, I think. This is not to say that everyone should not adapt this philosophy.
It is true that liberalization arguably hurt economies before, for example during the 1970s, when the IMF institutionalized Structural Adjustment Programs. However, with the rise of global value chain development, the situation today is different. Trade liberalization promotes sustainable development as opposed to prevents it. I argue this above (response to jmason) and you can find arguments for in Richard Baldwin’s The Great Convergence and here. Since these sources may suffer from ‘Western’ bias, please counter me, if possible.
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Yes, it is interesting how a human life can be simply valued in monetary terms. However, this is not to say that lives of individuals of different income levels have different values. Rather, these lives are valued equally. However, what the calculations of the values of QALY show is how much it costs to provide a quality life-year to an individual. I will clarify this point in my revised draft. It seems absolutely moral, rather, most moral, to me, to spend finances where they provide the most healthy years of life. Although, having enough to provide quality lives for all is even better. Again, that is why EA should spread.
I am not sure if I am sufficiently aware of the exceptions to money = wellbeing rule. For me, money must be invested the most cost-effectively to meet the most needs of the most. These needs can be understood both as those on the Maslow hierarchy and those described by Max Neef.
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Universal 12-years of education should not be promoted worldwide because there are other more urgent issues that will help sustainable development of nations better than investing scarce resources into education. Plus, schooling in emerging economies may not be adequate (e.g. in relatively developed South Africa, most teachers do not pass exams for grades below those which they teach; in emerging economies, it is common to beat children as opposed to nurture inquiry and understanding; and, education in former colonies suffers from the bias of raising elites (formerly ruling class) while leaving everyone behind without the ability to catch up).
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Please keep your bold comments. At the same time, do not be offended if people do not reply or downvote (see how many of my posts are left without replies and I am just fine—I did what I could to share my perspective). I can both try to improve the ability of my messages to be well received and try to reach a more receptible audience.
on writing. 1) it takes time, 2) this forum privileges english speakers 3) the emphasis on writing becomes a hurdle for people for whom skill in written communication is so-so
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the exceptions to money = well being rule are Jamaica, Costa Rica, Kerala, China (pre 1979 reforms), Sri Lanka, Mauritius, Cuba, South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong (pre 1999), Japan (Meiji reforms). In all these countries(kerala is a state) focus on basic education preceded health and wealth, this is the fast path to human development.
The slow path is by focusing on money, trade, industrialization at the expense of basic education and health. India is an average example of this slow path. South Africa is an almost perfect example of doing the wrong things, and crawling on the slow path.
I fully agree with you that education in say India is geared towards elites, which means college and professional education, while neglecting basic education which should be the emphasis for any society.
Regarding the Great Convergence, I will say that it is a great convergence in education first and then everything is a consequence.
‘Great Convergence’ in education is an outcome of increasing global output, which is based on higher trade.
My research shows that it is the other way around, first comes education, which results in better health and finally better incomes.
Going back to the very first example that I gave: Pakistan until recently had more money than India, and even today is ahead of Bangladesh. However Bangladesh has better life expectancy than India which in turn has better life expectancy than Pakistan.
In terms of education Pakistan has always lagged India and Bangladesh and continues to do so, the money that they have does not seem to have helped. Side note Bangladesh lags India in education, but still is ahead in terms of some human development indicators, they are doing something right that I don’t fully understand.
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The problems of education systems are serious, it would be good if they are fixed. But fixing them before children are enrolled means that the kids get no education at all. Even flawed education is better than no education. I note that the person in the TED talk is talking about British system of education, the talk has no relevance in agricultural countries with first generation learners.
I agree the educational systems are deeply flawed, but they are not destructive. Whoever is not reached by those flawed educational systems is left behind.
Even flawed education is better than no education. … Whoever is not reached by those flawed educational systems is left behind.
This actually makes a lot of sense (e.g. if one cannot read they cannot learn further; perhaps even children in severely lacking schools learn to read). Actually, what do you think is the most cost-effective method of providing children (any) education?
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My research shows that it is the other way around, first comes education, which results in better health and finally better incomes.
This too, I believe, is the case, at least at the national level. Only for me, education means “productive know-how,” or education which is useful to improved health and employment outcomes, so for example education on hygiene, usefulness of hospitals (e.g. here), and education that finds people jobs or enables them to build their own successful businesses. This education may be ‘imported’ from abroad, for example if highly skilled foreign investors employ and give health insurance to their employees.
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Yes, there may be different factors that come into play when it comes to India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh that determine the life expectancy in these countries. Is Bangladesh (and India?) the darling of foreign developers? Or, is it that Bangladesh deregulates its abundant labor market which leads to cheap labor and thus foreign investment? Does Bangladesh benefit from its coastal location that makes it an ideal spot for distribution of products to Asia, as well as importing inputs for cheap?
In India, is it the country’s digitization program (such as with IndiaStack) that supports the nation’s development?
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Yes, the speaker in the TED talk is commenting on the British system of education. I know it is a bit of a stretch. But, the British system has, I think, remained in former British colonies.
Actually, what do you think is the most cost-effective method of providing children (any) education?
Figure out why they are not in school, enroll them in school, make sure they attend, and finally see if there are any easy interventions that can be made (like teaching at right level). But most important keep kids in school for 12 years of schooling even if they seem to be learning nothing on tests.
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the India case is clear, they did a better job of educating kids than Pakistan. Bangladesh is behind India but not too far behind in educational terms, my guess is that they spend more on primary healthcare than India which can explain the difference in life expectancy.
I also studied that Singapore advanced because of its geographical advantage and trade policy: this enabled Singapore to become Asia’s major port. As per this article, Singapore first supported low-skill (little education needed) manufacturing sector through industrial policy. Only with rapid growth, Singapore was able to invest into the education of its labor force and create more sophisticated products. The current comparative advantage in high-skill production enables Singapore to benefit from further investment into education.
The question is whether countries that are comparatively disadvantaged in skill should invest into education, in order to progress within the global value chains. Perhaps. This is actually what India does. India invests into its services (high-skill) sectors, such as IT and pharmaceuticals, trying to move its labor force from manufacturing for which little education is needed.
But, are you talking more about universal primary education as opposed to sector-specific upskilling?
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With its liberal trade policy, Hong Kong developed because it has functioned as an intermediary between foreign investors and China.
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There have been much more people in poverty in China before 1979 than after. This is because China liberalized its trade. The post-1979 economic growth enabled China to invest more into education. However, the important reason of Chinese growth is that it copied foreign intellectual property.
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I am not sure if Jamaica, Sri Lanka, Mauritius, and Cuba benefited from their prioritization of education. Is it that people in these countries are much better educated than the average citizens of nations of the same wealth (GDP/capita) levels? If so, how do these people benefited? Because of their education are their healthier? Happier? Better able to advocate for themselves?
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Further, I believed that Japan developed because the United States did not punish it for copying the U.S. intellectual property. This was because of the U.S.-Japan military alliance.
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I am not sure about South Korea, Kerala and Chinese Taipei.
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The above examples imply that although knowledge is important, it is more cost-effective to copy/access foreign know-how in order to advance economically. A higher government revenue enables nations to invest more into education, in absolute terms. Thus, government investment into education may increase as a result of prioritization of trade and industrialization in the first place.
This makes sense that the EA community does not value outputs as much as outcomes of education. If positive outputs of education (e.g. expected education levels of children under 18 years of age of different genders) fail to create positive (e.g. “earnings or health”) outcomes—this is, if even highly educated people cannot find jobs and suffer from poor health, for instance as measured by U5MR, then we should not be investing into education: this investment does ‘nothing good.’ I think that is what the article you are referring to is arguing. The same is argued by this impact evaluation manual of the World Bank. Thus, if keeping children in school is not very beneficial to them, maybe something else, such as deworming, may be a better option to invest your donations. If children suffer from schistosomiasis (intestinal worms) then cannot focus and so gain little from the time they spend in school. Does this make sense?
Meta note: I am talking about primary and secondary education which is equivalent to high school education is US. Some schooling systems have vocational/trade school in years 10-12, instead of college track courses. Either way kids are staying in school for twelve years.
The country examples of the fast path that I gave “violate the money = well being rule”, and show how some countries had better education and health before they became rich.
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In all the examples that I gave Jamaica, Sri Lanka, Mauritius, Cuba, Japan(Meiji era), Kerala, China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Costa Rica etc.. people became much better educated than their counterparts in other countries with similar levels of income (GDP/per capita)
Educated citizens benefitted by being healthier, knowing how to avoid disease, when to go to doctor, how to follow instructions, being better able to advocate for themselves. Knowledge of human biology led to desire to control fertility, which in turn led to use of contraceptives, this also involves negotiating fertility in a marriage, which the husbands usually control in agricultural societies. Being able to understand and participate in modern societies is enhanced by education.
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Thus, government investment into education may increase as a result of prioritization of trade and industrialization in the first place.
Not true. Countries that prioritized trade and industrialization stayed on the slow path. E.g. India with its efforts on import substitution industrialization policies, while neglecting basic education and health, this has continued even after opening up the economy with the result that India is far behind China, and is behind Bangladesh in some human development indicators (life expectancy in India is 68 vs 72 in Bangladesh), despite rapid economic growth.
Also if trade is so important, why were China and India so far behind at independence? After all China opened its economy to free (opium) trade, and India was ruled by UK, the leading light of industrialization and trade.
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Costa Rica, my knowledge is from HPA (1989) where Sen and Dreze talk about Costa Rica as a model from which lessons could be learnt. This is prior to intel’s investment in 1995.
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Regarding Singapore basic education was an important part of what it did right. This report sheds more light. Industrial policy, trade etc were the other things that they did right.
Countries that have universal primary education and 50% secondary education (high school equivalent) have done best, link.
Manufacturing jobs require 8-12 years of schooling. That may seem like low skill or little education, but it is an extraordinary achievement for countries that are primarily agricultural.
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Sen has a lot to say about China
” By 1979, when the economic reform came, the Chinese life expectancy was already 68 years; the Indian life expectancy was 54 years, 14 years behind it.”
“There are really major lessons there, and I might say also one of the unsung contributions of the pre-reform educational and health care expansion is, I believe, the radical economic expansion that took place in the 1980s. After the economic reform, it would have been very hard without the base of elementary education which China had and India did not at that time, which is still a factor which bothers India badly.”
https://asiasociety.org/amartya-sen-what-china-could-teach-india-then-and-now
“Look at Kerala’s policy for universal education and universal healthcare. The Communist Party first come into office in 1957, they declared their policy in 1960. 1963 I’m in Delhi teaching in Delhi School of Economics and people ask me “Do you think it’s feasible?” I said “absolutely feasible”. Primarily for one economic reason, namely that you need far less money than you would need in, say, Britain to provide that level of healthcare and education.
This argument is not very sophisticated but on the other hand it could make a dramatic difference between life and death. Many of my colleagues at Delhi School of Economics said that I’m just leading people up the garden path, as an economist I should criticise, because Kerala was the third poorest state in India then. How could they afford it? And my claim was the economic argument. Also there being externalities and the “public good feature” as economists call it. I was certain that on top of that, for reasons which we began with, that the policies would also stimulate economic growth and development. In the latest round of national sample survey, if you put the urban and rural together, Kerala has now the highest per capita income in the whole of India. I would have thought some people who thought I was leading people up the garden path would say that they were mistaken. Have I got such statements? I’m afraid I have not! Am I happy that my expectations have been fulfilled? Yes, very happy indeed. Not for myself, that’s a trivial thing. But the fact that a people-friendly education and health policy could make a difference, not only to their lives – which happened immediately, life expectancy shot up in Kerala straight away – but also ultimately on economic growth”
https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/southasia/2015/11/19/india-is-the-only-country-in-the-world-trying-to-become-a-global-economic-power-with-an-uneducated-and-unhealthy-labour-force-amartya-sen/
Sure China could invest more in education once it became rich, but how was China in 1979 able to have universal primary education and more than 50% of its kids under 18 finish 9th grade?
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Japan under Meiji Restoration was 1860-1900, we can be sure that the rise of Japan pre first world war had nothing to do with US- Japan military alliance.
I am not talking about “development” which in EA means money, I am talking about how health and education levels changed in the timeframe 1860-1900 when the country was poor.
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Regarding South Africa and Japan, Japan today is an aging society with low fertility rate and hence less kids needing to be educated. It makes sense that they spend less on education. The other way in which Japan is different is that Japan has 4 generations of educated people for the last 100 years, South Africa is full of second generation learners even today, and virtually nobody has gone to college. It makes sense that they are spending money on education today.
I should have been more clearer the “developed” South Africa with its apartheid regime pre 1994 did not invest in education and those effects are still being felt today, good for them that the current democratic government is spending on education. Even so Bangladesh which is four times poorer has an additional 10 years of life expectancy over South Africa
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Thus, if keeping children in school is not very beneficial to them, maybe something else, such as deworming, may be a better option to invest your donations. If children suffer from schistosomiasis (intestinal worms) then cannot focus and so gain little from the time they spend in school. Does this make sense?
Deworming is so cheap because it leverages preexisting schools, I did donate to deworming charities a few years ago. The goal of deworming is two fold, to improve health and to improve education. If you read Give Wells reports they only place value on improvements in health!!! Why are the educational gains unimportant Give Well?
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This makes sense that the EA community does not value outputs as much as outcomes of education. …(e.g. “earnings or health”) outcomes
The most respected and widely used index for measuring human well being is the human development index, it includes education as an outcome, valuable for its own sake, the EA community has to explain why it deems education not useful while the UNDP thinks that it is important.
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It’s not for the lack of money that the world is in the state that is in today.
“The lack of political commitment not of financial resources, is often the real cause of human neglect. That is the main conclusion of Human Development Report 1991”
Human priority concerns according to UNDP are Basic Education, Basic Health, Water supply and sanitation, Nutrition programs and Family planning services.
“Why is income part of the human development index?
Longevity and education are clearly valuable aspects of a good life”
“A new measure of national wealth
Economists had long assumed that the main component of a country’s productive wealth is physical capital (“produced assets”). But according to the World Bank’s assessment for 192 countries, physical capital on average accounts for only 16% of total wealth. More important is natural capital, which accounts for 20%. And more important still is human capital, which accounts for 64%.”
“In 1960 Pakistan and the Republic of Korea had similar incomes. Rut they had very different primary school enrolment ratios-30% in Pakistan, 94% in the Republic of Korea one of the main reasons that over the next 25 years the per capita GDP of the Republic of Korea grew to three times that of Pakistan.”
“Even “unskilled” workers in a modern factory need the literacy, numeracy and discipline learned in primary and lower-secondary school”
“It generally is easier to deal with the “good human development and poor growth” problem than with the opposite-poor human development with good growth.”
“Experience suggests that no country undergoes a structural transformation of
the economy without raising basic education levels. The well-known links between
female education and fertility, between education and productivity and between
mother’s education and children’s educational attainment all explain why this is so”
Educated citizens benefitted by being healthier, knowing how to avoid disease, when to go to doctor, how to follow instructions, being better able to advocate for themselves. Knowledge of human biology led to desire to control fertility, which in turn led to use of contraceptives, this also involves negotiating fertility in a marriage, which the husbands usually control in agricultural societies. Being able to understand and participate in modern societies is enhanced by education.
This is compelling.
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Also if trade is so important, why were China and India so far behind at independence?
Because authoritarian economies lower worker and environmental rights more easily than democracies. This attracts foreign investment which promoted industrial growth. This is independent of education levels of the host economy (works for both highly skilled and low-skill workers).
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Regarding Singapore basic education was an important part of what it did right. This report sheds more light. Industrial policy, trade etc were the other things that they did right.
Thank you for the information. This shows Singapore has been investing into education since before it industrialized. Hmm.. this could point on the notion that education precedes industrialization and development.
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Countries that have universal primary education and 50% secondary education (high school equivalent) have done best, link.
I do not see a causation to be proven in this paper. Only correlation is shown.
Manufacturing jobs require 8-12 years of schooling. That may seem like low skill or little education, but it is an extraordinary achievement for countries that are primarily agricultural.
Can you please provide evidence of this? I believe that manufacturing becomes so disaggregated (Baldwin, The Great Convergence) that it comes to the point that one worker ‘connects the blue cable’ the other worker ‘puts on a case’ and eventually ‘a smartphone is made.’
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But the fact that a people-friendly education and health policy could make a difference, not only to their lives – which happened immediately, life expectancy shot up in Kerala straight away – but also ultimately on economic growth
This is interesting. It seems like India is doing many good things for its citizens. For example, I heard from Mr. Nandan Nilekani about the ID digitization of India, which, as he reports, supported the growth of the nation.
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Sure China could invest more in education once it became rich, but how was China in 1979 able to have universal primary education and more than 50% of its kids under 18 finish 9th grade?
I am not sure, maybe skewed statistics of the authoritarian government? Maybe the firm rule of the authoritarian government?
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Japan under Meiji Restoration was 1860-1900, we can be sure that the rise of Japan pre first world war had nothing to do with US- Japan military alliance.
I am not talking about “development” which in EA means money, I am talking about how health and education levels changed in the timeframe 1860-1900 when the country was poor.
Point noted. Clearly, I should learn more about the Meiji Restoration in Japan.
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Regarding South Africa and Japan, Japan today is an aging society with low fertility rate and hence less kids needing to be educated. It makes sense that they spend less on education. The other way in which Japan is different is that Japan has 4 generations of educated people for the last 100 years, South Africa is full of second generation learners even today, and virtually nobody has gone to college. It makes sense that they are spending money on education today.
This makes sense that the % of GDP spent on education should take the fraction of school-age population. Perhaps this point should be brought to the World Bank which omits the educational spending indicator adjusted for % of school-aged children?
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I should have been more clearer the “developed” South Africa with its apartheid regime pre 1994 did not invest in education and those effects are still being felt today, good for them that the current democratic government is spending on education. Even so Bangladesh which is four times poorer has an additional 10 years of life expectancy over South Africa
I have studied a similar topic in Cape Town.
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Why are the educational gains unimportant Give Well?
Perhaps because educational gains are not as easily measurable as health outcomes? Because donors do connect with others health suffering (also get sick) but do not connect with others problems that arise due to low education (this is less of a problem among affluent donors in affluent economies)? Because educational-outcomes RTC studies have not been pursued en masse?
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The most respected and widely used index for measuring human well being is the human development index, it includes education as an outcome, valuable for its own sake, the EA community has to explain why it deems education not useful while the UNDP thinks that it is important.
… in addition to the health outcomes RCT researchers (e.g. of JPAL and IPA) who may neglect educational attainment for its own sake, assuming spillovers into other areas. Actually, do you have any work to support that better education will lead to better health, employment, and wellbeing outcomes?
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But according to the World Bank’s assessment for 192 countries, physical capital on average accounts for only 16% of total wealth. More important is natural capital, which accounts for 20%. And more important still is human capital, which accounts for 64%.
I would imagine that today, the numbers shift more toward human capital. This is because investments into education may be costly. However, it may not be the case with rising digitization of education—e.g. once an online/digital curriculum is developed, there is little additional costs of educating marginal users.
Actually, does the report value “human capital” as the total cost of ones education (p. 51)?
The Guardian article cites: “use of the opportunities of global commerce for the reduction of poverty have drawn on help from basic education on a wide basis.” This means that education, given favorable trade environment, will reduce poverty [and thus improve wellbeing].
I am glad that the IOE Centre for Education and International Development exists/thrives.
Because authoritarian economies lower worker and environmental rights more easily than democracies. This attracts foreign investment which promoted industrial growth.
Not sure what you are saying here, under the British, India was deliberately deindustrialized, and made to produce primary commodities. That is the reason why India was so behind. Trade between the West and China had negative effects on China (opium trade).
I do not see a causation to be proven in this paper. Only correlation is shown.
causation in social sciences is very hard, the time period (30 years) and the number of countries (101) give me confidence in the results.
Can you please provide evidence of this? I believe that manufacturing becomes so disaggregated
“For India to match China in its range of manufacturing capacity — its ability to produce gadgets of almost every kind, with increasing use of technology and better quality control — it needs a better-educated and healthier labor force at all levels of society.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/20/opinion/why-india-trails-china.html
It seems like India is doing many good things for its citizens.
Unfortunately, India is doing so-so, Kerala is an exception and one of the best developed states in India today, the rest of India did not focus on education and lagged behind.
This is not about economic growth, this is about how investments in education and health by the 3rd poorest state in India 50 years ago, took it to the top of the country 20 years later where it has stayed since then.
I am not sure, maybe skewed statistics of the authoritarian government? Maybe the firm rule of the authoritarian government?
how about: Poor countries have enough resources to educate their people, IFF there is political will. China had the political will so did Kerala(India), Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka.
Actually, do you have any work to support that better education will lead to better health, employment, and wellbeing outcomes?
In all the examples that I gave education is at the root.
Sri Lanka, Cuba, Jamaica, and Kerala education was the cause of better health.
South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong, it was the cause of both better health and wealth.
Baldwin, The Great Convergence
I read the book, it only talks about the successful economies and then only about trade. Nothing about the initial conditions, policies and how they created todays countries.
Because authoritarian economies lower worker and environmental rights more easily than democracies. This attracts foreign investment which promoted industrial growth.
Not sure what you are saying here, under the British, India was deliberately deindustrialized, and made to produce primary commodities. That is the reason why India was so behind. Trade between the West and China had negative effects on China (opium trade).
-This implies that adding more value to exports domestically may enable nations to thrive.
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I do not see a causation to be proven in this paper. Only correlation is shown.
causation in social sciences is very hard, the time period (30 years) and the number of countries (101) give me confidence in the results.
-Well, effective altruists may like proven causation. Otherwise they cannot be sure that education leads to growth. What if growth leads to education? What if something else (maybe international investment??) leads to both growth and education?
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-Are you criticizing that India aims to educate few elites (e.g. in engineering and IT) leaving others behind? Should India sacrifice some of its growth to more inclusive education?
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how about: Poor countries have enough resources to educate their people, IFF there is political will. China had the political will so did Kerala(India), Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka.
-Well, if there is political will, countries may choose to invest into issues other than education, if they believe that will help that country’s competitiveness. Perhaps, if the SDG goal of inclusive education is highlighted, then India would invest more into meeting that objective?
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Baldwin, The Great Convergence
I read the book, it only talks about the successful economies and then only about trade. Nothing about the initial conditions, policies and how they created todays countries.
-Well, effective altruists may like proven causation. Otherwise they cannot be sure that education leads to growth. What if growth leads to education?
If growth leads to education, then why is South Africa behind Jamaica and India, how about Bangladesh > Pakistan? Sri Lanka > Brazil? The country studies and understanding the history of various countries and cross comparisons across time and space help understanding root causes.
Frankly EA is far from understanding root causes of human development, if I had to drop one index from HDI I would have dropped money not education.
Its very strange EA says education has no value, but they want evidence, thinking, papers, books. If education is so critical to the functioning of EA then why does EA assume that it is not important for the well being of illiterate societies?
What if something else (maybe international investment??) leads to both growth and education?
Both money and education are big items, we can be reasonably sure that we did not miss out small things that have outsize effect. Let’s take deworming, it has enormous positive effects (assuming deworming increases schooling by 10+ years/100 $USD). This is great on the marginal side for individual EA’s. If one takes the systemic view then the cost of schools, cost of enrolling kids, retention, attendance costs all matter. Put all these things together and schooling costs should be 5% of GDP, there maybe marginal improvements maybe 4% is enough, but we can be sure .4% will not be enough.
-Are you criticizing that India aims to educate few elites (e.g. in engineering and IT) leaving others behind? Should India sacrifice some of its growth to more inclusive education?
There is no tradeoff between growth and inclusive education.
“Scenario 4 finally presents another possible direction of improvement from the baseline (which somewhat resembles the case of India), in which half of the population remains without education although 5% have tertiary education, 15% secondary, and 30% primary. This case of elitist education in a
context with half of the population being without any schooling does clearly better than the baseline and even better than the universal primary education (combined with 10% secondary and no tertiary), but falls far short of the economic growth implied by universal primary combined with 50% secondary and no tertiary education”
India fell short on growth because they did not educate their population, China did a better job and hence its economy is better. Amartya Sen says the same.
If India’s education was inclusive and not elitist, India would be better off in education terms, health, and finally in money. See China, or Kerala.
-Well, if there is political will, countries may choose to invest into issues other than education, if they believe that will help that country’s competitiveness. Perhaps, if the SDG goal of inclusive education is highlighted, then India would invest more into meeting that objective?
I am not a fan of speculating about how I can influence politics, Amartya Sen has been a voice of reason, his book Hunger and Public Action is still timely for EA even today. Sen has voiced his opinions and governments know where he stands.
The political will of China, Cuba, Kerala comes from their ideology all three places being communist (in the past, and to varying degrees). Communists have historically given great importance to education, health and equality. It shows in their results. They cared for industrialization too but health, education, and equality were their primary values.
Of course there are others who gave similar importance to health, education Singapore, South Korea come to mind.
The common thread is the priority or importance given to education and health. Money is not the most important factor in improving health and education in poor countries.
Sen says
“Finally, it is important to note that despite the gigantic size of excess mortality in the Chinese famine, the extra mortality in India from regular deprivation in normal times vastly overshadows the former. Comparing India’s death rate of 12 per thousand with China’s of 7 per thousand, and applying that difference to the Indian population of 781 million in 1986, we get an estimate of excess normal mortality in India of 3.9 million per year. This implies that every eight years or so more people die in India because of its higher regular death rate than died in China in the gigantic famine of (p.215) 1958–61.37 India seems to manage to fill its cupboard with more skeletons every eight years than China put there in its years of shame.”
Out of the half a billion dollars that was given to “global health and development” via GW or influenced by it. Exactly zero dollars went to education. Deworming according to Esther Duflo increases time in school, but GW analysis found that it did not increase time in school (or was insignificant) so we can discount it as going toward education.
Give Well did only 2 reports on education, one in 2009, and another in 2018. They came up empty.
The overall importance given to education is zero.
“We do not place much intrinsic value on increasing time in school or test scores”
But you cut off the quote in a very misleading way indeed:
We do not place much intrinsic value on increasing time in school or test scores, although we think that such improvements may have instrumental value.
Unless you think spending time in school is very useful even if it has no other benefits to kids (i.e. they don’t learn anything they use later in life), GiveWell is surely right here that the benefits are mostly instrumental.
It is wrong to quote others in a way that misrepresents their view like this.
You also say:
“Exactly zero dollars went to education … The overall importance given to education is zero.”
GiveWell just didn’t think the very best giving opportunities they could support were in education — that doesn’t mean they think it has no value. They also didn’t buy people food, but presumably they don’t think eating is a useless activity and people can safely starve themselves.
GiveWell isn’t all of EA. Some EAs probably have a very positive view of the value of education. There’s a wide range of views on most issues.
From Education for All: is the world on track? EFA global monitoring report, 2002 by UNESCO
As Sen puts it,
“it is often asked whether certain political or social freedoms, such as the liberty of political participation and dissent, or opportunities to receive basic education, are or are not ‘conducive to development’. In the light of the more foundational view of development as freedom, this way of posing the question tends to miss the important understanding that these substantive freedoms (that is, the liberty of political participation or the opportunity to receive basic education or health care) are among the constituent components of development. Their relevance for development does not have to be freshly established through their indirect contribution
to the growth of GNP or to the promotion of industrialization.”
Hence, education counts as a ‘valuable being or doing’, as an ‘end’ of development.
It seems that the fundamental disagreement between you and some others is that you associate intrinsic value to time spent in school, while others believe that being in school is worthy only if it brings students positive health and income outcomes.
For example, you may believe that if a third grade student who fell behind in their first grade due to post-colonial education and is not learning anything anymore should be kept in school, e.g. where teachers beat children and fail the exams of grades below those which they teach, for another eight years, because school is good on its own.
Others may believe that a third-grade student who fell behind in their first grade does not need to attend the school where the only thing they learn is that they cannot do what is required from them, teachers cannot help them, and they receive beating for this situation. Instead, the finances which would be otherwise spent on keeping this student in school should be spent on, e.g. deworming, because this will enable the student to be healthy, energetic, and free, helping their family business.
you associate intrinsic value to time spent in school
not just me UNDP, Amartya Sen, Malala Yousafzai assume that time spent in school has intrinsic value.
I along with them want better schools, better teaching etc.. but the quality of the schooling system should detract from the fact that schooling has value.
https://www.cgdev.org/blog/does-education-need-qaly-and-lays-it
“The non-pecuniary returns to education—child health, delayed pregnancy and marriage, democratic participation and so on—are substantial in education systems that otherwise perform dismally on test scores (e.g. the positive impacts of secondary schooling in Ghana despite low gain in learning shown in Duflo, Dupas & Kremer 2017).
Looking across countries (Figure 2), there is precisely zero relationship between school quality (measured by the World Bank Harmonized Learning Outcomes) and the labour market rate of return on investment in schooling.”
So what seems like bad schooling in terms of test scores, still has instrumental and intrinsic value.
where teachers beat children and fail the exams of grades below those which they teach, for another eight years, because school is good on its own.
I am not in favor of punishment, yes schools in agricultural societies do beat children. Worse still in the classroom sometimes they face discrimination, made to sit apart from other kids based on caste etc.. Race in USA and South Africa played that same role.
Even so education is better, because tomorrow they grow up, teach in their own communities, or put pressure on governments for change. e.g. the civil rights movement in the US, which BTW had a lot of moral help from newly independent countries, and was a factor in Brown vs Board
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_v._Board_of_Education#Background
Most countries independence leaders went to college in Western countries, we can be sure that they faced racism from society and from the colleges they went to. The education was useful nevertheless.
the finances which would be otherwise spent on keeping this student in school should be spent on e.g. deworming
deworming is so cheap because kids are in school. if they are not in school, you cant deworm them because the medicine is given in school.
I have to say, I have been doing this for over a decade, and I have never met a girl who said to me, you know, “I want to stay at home,” “I want to graze the cattle,” “I want to look after the siblings,” “I want to be a child bride.” Every single girl I meet wants to go to school. And that’s what we really want to do.
UNDP (United Nations Development Programme) assumes education has intrinsic value, so do I.
UNDP in 1996 Human Development Report page 50 asks the question “Why is income part of the human development index?” For them it is obvious that “Longevity and education are clearly valuable aspects of a good life” they then go on to explain why income should be included in the index.
In this thread I asked the question earlier
“The most respected and widely used index for measuring human well being is the human development index, it includes education as an outcome, valuable for its own sake, the EA community has to explain why it deems education not useful while the UNDP thinks that it is important.”
GiveWell is surely right here that the benefits are mostly instrumental.
And that is the crux of the disagreement. I (and UNDP) believe Education like health has intrinsic value, whereas Give Well and the EA community does not.
Unless you think spending time in school is very useful even if it has no other benefits to kids
Let me unpack this. The time spent in school has benefits for kids even if the benefits do not show up in terms of health, wealth. Why? It changes outlook towards life, makes married life less unequal for women, increases self-respect, self-confidence, allows for better participation in society.
“There are aspects of human flourishing that education enhances that are neglected by the human capital approach. This is the aspect of
education enabling human being to live freely and fully. The development of human capacity to think and reason. This facilitates the
ability of individuals who are educated to exercise critical reasoning about their lives and about the society in which they live. ”
From an evolutionary standpoint , our large plastic brains and long childhood is designed to absorb knowledge via cultural transmission. Kids who go to school are soaked in the enormous changes in knowledge of the industrial era, and absorb the values of industrial era(modern values). Kids who don’t go to school are stuck with much less knowledge, are stuck with values of agricultural era (patriarchal values)
They also didn’t buy people food, but presumably they don’t think eating is a useless activity and people can safely starve themselves.
I actually agree with GiveWell on this, food has no intrinsic value only instrumental value. However education is very different, it has intrinsic value.
GiveWell just didn’t think the very best giving opportunities they could support were in education — that doesn’t mean they think it has no value.
No. Give Well assumed that education by itself had no value. Then they looked for the effects of education on health and earnings and find
” very little evidence of effects of education on health outcomes”
“evidence that education increases earnings is currently thin”
The report by GiveWell is poorly done, which itself is a sign of the importance given to education.
GiveWell isn’t all of EA. Some EAs probably have a very positive view of the value of education. There’s a wide range of views on most issues.
I appreciate and understand the difference. However GW is the most respected organization with great influence among EA’s interested in the space of Global Human Well Being. Anybody reading about EA (from the outside) easily sees that Global Health And Development is a cause priority.
So while some EA’s might have different views or even a wide range of views. The EA community as a whole gives very little (zero) importance to education.
“changes outlook towards life, makes married life less unequal for women, increases self-respect, self-confidence, allows for better participation in society”
I agree these are all benefits, but I class them as instrumental benefits, and imagine most others here do as well.
They are benefits inasmuch as they go on to improve people’s well-being.
“the human development index, it includes education as an outcome, valuable for its own sake”
The HDI also includes GDP which presumably nobody thinks is valuable for its own sake (i.e. widgets are only useful inasmuch as they make people better off when they’re used not valuable merely for existing). In my opinion education is good to have in the HDI as a proxy for all of the many instrumental benefits it provides people.
Most people here place great weight on a welfarist theory of value: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/well-being/ . If you disagree with welfarism then it would pay to set education aside for a minute and go back and discuss more fundamental issues in moral philosophy.
The last time I had this discussion about intrinsic values, I was sent to read another SEP article, this is what it said
“One of the most comprehensive lists of intrinsic goods that anyone has suggested is that given by William Frankena ….consciousness,.… truth; knowledge and true opinions of various kinds, understanding, wisdom;”
Education brings about changes in consciousness, truth, knowledge and true opinions of various kinds, understanding, wisdom.
Or simply education is knowledge, understanding, wisdom, truth etc.. Education has intrinsic value.
The HDI also includes GDP which presumably nobody thinks is valuable for its own sake
Quoting myself from earlier in the thread
“Frankly EA is far from understanding root causes of human development, if I had to drop one index from HDI I would have dropped money not education.”
I agree these are all benefits, but I class them as instrumental benefits, and imagine most others here do as well.
no matter how you class them, EA headlining money and health as a cause priority while dropping education. + spending no money on education is straight out saying a lot about the priorities of EA.
EA gives zero value to education, and that is fundamentally wrong.
I agree that EA is not working in every area, and that is cool. How about
“EA gives very little value to education, and that is fundamentally wrong.”
On what basis has EA dropped Education from the headline? Why do they think UNDP is wrong? Why is HDI wrong?
it doesn’t mean that EAs think that education isn’t important. In fact EA is very disproportionately composed of highly educated people—presumably at least some of these people value education highly
Which is why this whole conversation is strange to me, people clearly see the value of education for themselves but not for others!
Malala in her nobel prize lecture put it beautifully
“It is not time to tell the world leaders to realize how important education is — they already know it — their own children are in good schools. Now it is time to call them to take action for the rest of the
world’s children.
We ask the world leaders to unite and make education their top priority.”
Yay.. another set of my comments gets downvoted without any response.
I think what would really resolve your debate would be associating a quality of life measure to education outcomes as well as to time spent in school. See Whitehead and Ali on assigning health-related quality of life (HRQoL) value to different health outcomes.
Even so comparing health to money itself is a moral decision and depends on ones intuitions and preferences without clear answers. e.g. Give Well values doubling of income for one year = .6 years of life
I value the same doubling of income at less than .1 years
Who is right?
EA community values education (by itself) at zero, so does Give Well. I value 1 year of education = 1 year of life
Putting the two together I value
1 year of education = 6 years of income
Perhaps, Western education empowers some (e.g. females) through the socio-economic prospects that education gives them. Thus, the traditionally disenfranchised individuals gain power over those they have been traditionally subject to (e.g. males). Yet, these educated females are still subject to a discriminatory norm—that which is based on their financial situation and is imposed by the West.
Thus, these females may ‘trade’ their submission to males to their submission to ‘the rich.’ Therefore, although education may seem to empower otherwise industrially unskilled individuals, it may reduce the power which these individuals draw from adhering to traditional norms. So, the “modern values” which the “industrial era” education instills in children may not have an intrinsic worth—it always depends on the normative structure of achievement through which you look at the issue.
This may be why GW highly values measurable health outcomes. Empowerment is hard to measure and relative. Yet, GiveDirectly supported research that measured beneficiaries’ psychological improvements—measured the level of cortisol in GD’s program’s participants’ saliva.
Do you think GW should assign more value to improvements in psychological wellbeing, which stem, for example, from self-perceptions of one’s improved critical thinking abilities and empowerment?
Education benefits are for boys too, not just girls. Girls dont gain power over boys, after all USA is still male dominated. Educated girls gain a little more power, so that cannot be dominated to the extent that they were in agricultural societies.
From my understanding the “support” that women get in traditional societies is very stifling. Ghoonghat, Burka, citing woman for wearing bikini in France, honor killings, ban on dating, obsession with virginity, early marriage, lots of kids, abortion of girl child, the problems are endless. They are not solved in the industrial era, but life for women is much better.
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Sure psychological well-being can be considered, but data is hard to come by. I simply assume that every year of education is worth a year of life. That itself make Educate Girls as effective as GW charities.
Well, is it then that affluent females gain emancipation through using the products of low-paid low-skilled laborers, males and females, in developing countries?
Or, do well-to-do females use impoverished females’ work more than that of poor males, since the rich women outsource ‘traditionally their’ work, such as household care, to foreign domestic workers?
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I simply assume that every year of education is worth a year of life.
It would be interesting to quantify the quality of life associated with unit educational gains, for example by surveys similar to those described by Whitehead and Ali, which concern quality of life related to (mostly physical) health.
My writing and concern is not for affluent women, my concern is for the poor girls (and boys) who are not getting 6 years of education. Even if they get 12 years of education, they will not have enough earnings to hire anyone to work in their homes.
Educated women are better off in life (even without more money), because their married life is more equal, they have less number of kids, their husband’s family bosses them less, they can teach their kids, get small stuff done like deal with bank, interactions with society are better, they command respect etc.. The non woman specific things are positives for mens life too.
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I am happy to read and think about how to value education. I want the EA community to acknowledge that education has intrinsic value according to UN, and respond with why they don’t think it has intrinsic value.
Likewise Malala is a much better voice of the values of people in agricultural societies than any EA organization i saw.
It is not that Malala or the UN are always right, they make mistakes too. A good starting point is to assume that they are correct, when we think they are wrong, we should act with great care and deliberation. Prove that they are wrong, dismiss the parts in which they are mistaken, act and follow the rest.
Maybe, more than education by itself, you then value empowerment, equality, dignity, respect, lack of abuse, one’s ability to have a perspective which is valued, one’s ability to be considered as opposed to used, one’s ability to live for oneself as opposed to be forced to live for others, and an environment which is cooperative as opposed to abusive alongside the lines of characteristics assigned to an individual by society (at birth). Education is just means for achieving these goals.
In addition to all the benefits mentioned above I want to highlight ability to think for oneself, is much greater with educated people, ability to interact with society is much greater.
We could also say that we value health, because we can get up everyday, we can exist, we can drive, play a game, sing, dance, shower, walk, run, eat, see etc.. etc.. At some point such expansion becomes merely an enumeration of all the things that can be done if one is healthy, all those things are useful. Does such enumeration add any analytical value? I think not.
We simplify and say that health has intrinsic value. Likewise I believe education has intrinsic value.
When ones brain changes and gains capabilities, then it becomes intrinsic to that person and cannot be broken down into constituent pieces, merely for its effects.
My main thrust and criticism is not about what I think is valuable.
UNDP, Amartya Sen, Malala all agree that education has intrinsic value, they say education is an end in itself.
Why does EA think otherwise? On what basis are they dismissing the voice of people in the agricultural era?
It is wrong to quote others in a way that misrepresents their view like this.
This has bothered me quite a lot. I have been clear and consistent that I think that education has intrinsic value and have focused on that aspect. This can be seen from comments and posts on the forum.
I had no intent to mislead, I don’t see what I wrote as misleading or misrepresenting. I quoted accurately and linked to the source.
If anything it is the EA community that is misleading folks. “Development” is widely understood to include education when used in the context of “developing” countries or the global poor. Saying “Global Development” and not including education is extremely misleading it took me 2 years of immersion in EA to finally understand that EA folks don’t include education when talking about “Global Development”
There is no tradeoff between growth and inclusive education.
This would be great, if this holds true. Intuitively, this makes sense: investments in human capital improve a nation’s productivity—the only thing is that returns on education are not immediate (and the “discount rate” in poor areas may be high—people may not like sacrificing present benefit for a ‘distant’ future gain). The delayed benefits may be an issue for poor and indebted countries.
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“Its very strange EA says education has no value”
‘EA’ does not say this, and I don’t know anyone involved in EA who holds such a strong view.
Yes, perhaps EA can look into the long-term gains of inclusive education? There is an RCT on the effectiveness of after-school tutoring in improving students’ learning outcomes. However, I am not sure about statistically robust research that examines the conditions under which education leads to health, income, and wellbeing improvements.
the only thing is that returns on education are not immediate (and the “discount rate” in poor areas may be high—people may not like sacrificing present benefit for a ‘distant’ future gain).
We humans are social animals, and pass knowledge from one generation to another via culture, uneducated parents expect that the lives of their will be similar to their own. Schools are outside their social expectations for what is good or useful for their kids. ‘Sacrificing ’ current benefits for future benefits is not the main issue, those calculations and thoughts don’t occur to illiterate parents. They expect their kids to have similar lives as them, a winning formula that worked for 10,000+ years.
However, I am not sure about statistically robust research that examines the conditions under which education leads to health, income, and wellbeing improvements.
you should read research from Wolfgang Lutz, Jesus Crespo Cuaresma, Warren Sanderson. It is statistically robust.
I will also note that anthropology , sociology, demography are valid disciplines to reason about human societies, social policy. Math and statistics are not the only tools.
As far as RCT’s goes, RCT is good for finding short-term effects, and not very useful at finding effects that are long term in nature and those that have positive externalities like education.
Jean Dreze co-author with Sen in Hunger and Public Action and many other books has this to say about RCTs
Schools are outside their social expectations for what is good or useful for their kids. ‘Sacrificing ’ current benefits for future benefits is not the main issue, those calculations and thoughts don’t occur to illiterate parents. They expect their kids to have similar lives as them, a winning formula that worked for 10,000+ years.
I understand that one may think as such – closeminded thinking which does not question tradition and blindly follows authoritarian structure.
However, with the arguable dominance of the Western authoritarian structure which assigns power to socio-economic status as defined by the norms of industrial economies, even illiterate parents may wish their children to succeed within these new, Western structures, if the parents believe for such possibility.
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Thank you, I am skimming this article by Lutz, Cuaresma, and Sanderson. Controlling for “human capital dynamics” in their regression, the authors find that “improvements in educational attainment are the key to explaining productivity and income growth.
But perhaps the authors solely argue (also here) that favorable educational dividend (a high ratio of educated to uneducated workers), rather than favorable demographic dividend (high ratio of productive-age to unproductive-age labor force) leads to national growth.
The claim on the benefits of education seems intuitive: the more educated workforce a nation has, the higher up within global value chains it is.
Yet, will you be able to provide any other statistical evidence that quantifies the returns on investments in education (in terms of income and health changes), particularly in the geographical areas where Educate Girls operates?
even illiterate parents may wish their children to succeed within these new, Western structures, if the parents believe for such possibility
Sure they do, especially with exposure these days via media. However there is a differential in how much boys are sent to school vs girls. Age is also a factor: puberty is a big wall for the girl child in terms of going to school. Most parents send kids to school if one is accessible. Where schools are absent no one went to school. With MDG and SDG more focus has come on schools, they are now more accessible. Hence the increase in enrollment.
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The research from Lutz et all is highly recommended. Amartya Sen, Jean Dreze, Hans Rosling are also at the top of my list.
Yes there is no Demographic dividend, it is an education dividend.
Yet, will you be able to provide any other statistical evidence that quantifies the returns on investments in education (in terms of income and health changes),
Such data is hard to come by, even basic data like registrations of births, deaths is incomplete. If we look at the data from states of India we find that the relationship between education and health/income stands.
I would suggest moving away from requiring statistical evidence in every geographical area. Lets take medicine, first there is the research, then the RCT, then it comes to market. While the manufacturer should continue to monitor the effects of drug after the drug is in market, we dont expect them to run RCT in every country.
Like medicines the evidence for the benefits of education are robust and go a long way. We should be able to take that evidence as fact, and move on to finding out the best way to spread education to everybody. RCT can be used as a tool for this goal.
This is similar to how Duflo and others assume immunization is good, now they are working on getting everyone immunized and figuring out best way to do so via RCT.
As far as returns go, there is data on child mortality, maternal mortality, life expectancy, income by level of education. All of this data is approximate.
My calculations suggest that Educate Girls is 3-6 times more effective than most GW recommended charities and 30 times that of Give Directly. I dont take the estimates literally, I think they are good ballpark numbers.
OK, I read that there should be more RCT research on cost-effective methods of achieving favorable welfare outcomes through mass education, especially of disadvantaged students.
Hi Lucy, thank you for contribution to the EA forum. I’m sorry it’s been a frustrating experience for you.
Some questions that came to my mind when reading your post were:
Agreed that there is no straight line from money to wellbeing, but if it *is* possible to invest a relatively small amount of money to generate a relatively large amount of money for the global poor, then that surely seems like a good thing?
I don’t recognise your characterisation of GiveWell’s views on the importance of money vs life. As I understand it, GiveWell’s moral weights consider saving the life of an infant to be around 50x more valuable than doubling consumption for one person for one year, and that rises to 80x if the life saved is of someone aged over 5. (source: GiveWell CEA, August 2019 version, ‘Moral Weights’ tab)
I do agree with your assertion that improving wealth is not sufficient or necessary to improve wellbeing, and wellbeing is what we should care about. However I think I’m missing something about how this comment is adding something of value to this post. (note that I have not downvoted this post, and can’t promise that those who have downvoted have been thinking the same thing as me)
Thanks Sanjay,
Specifically on this one, trade is one of the fundamental ways countries interact in the world, and how they internally structure their societies. Thats a lot of power, and getting it wrong, can mean a lot of harm. Also if US decides to make give favorable terms to (say) India, it means that the constituency that is paying the cost is dilute and not so powerful, powerful interests would try to stop anything that reduces their power. There is a long ugly history of powerful actors giving nice cover stories “civilizing”, “free trade” and doing extraordinary harm.
I read it as: if 80 people double their income for one year ~= 1 life move 90 people people from bangladesh to india for one year == 90 * 7000 / (2*3900) ~= 1 life??? if they live another 50 years in india == 50 lifes????
Ignoring discounting a simpler way to think of it is: if a persons income doubles for life then ~~== an extra life???
I find this morality hard to swallow. If this seems moral to you, please explain how.
I want to be an order of magnitude away at least, say 500 − 1000 person years of double income is approx 1 life.
Why was my original post relevant: here is my thinking First, the post basis itself on givewell moral weights if they are off by 10, then the estimate is off by 10. So cost become $180 * 10 ~= which is in the same ballpark as other give well charities. Second, EA community is dominated by thinking about poverty, and influence from economists, does another post on trade really add value? Is the author aware of the exceptions to money = well being rule? Also read
About downvoting: If you had downvoted along with any comment, I would have been thrilled. Mostly I get anonymous downvotes, which is hard to take. When I look at voting on my comments I see that I end up at zero, or negative, but unusually more people vote on the comment. This is an indicator that I am controversial, so a learning opportunity for either me or the down voters.
It is somewhat intimidating when I see that people who work at EA organizations have mostly gone to the best universities. (I did not go to one)
Dear Lucy and Sanjay,
Thank you very much for the debate (I do not mean to put a stop to it, on the contrary).
Lucy, to explain the situation, it is possible that the downvotes stem from your form of writing. Maybe people expect that you write a draft, revise it, proofread it, revise again, see if it flows well, reread to see if you are making a clear and convincing argument, consider counter-propositions, incorporate them into your post, and finally truncate the post to about a third of the original writing. In this way, you save effort to the readers (who may themselves revise their posts) and thus the readers may perceive equality in the effort of knowledge-building on this forum. Otherwise, readers may not wish to exert the effort of trying to understand the arguments which are presented unclearly. However, this is just my perspective.
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Yes, in theory, because of the collective action problem, concentrated interest groups outcompete diffuse interests. Here, however, the concentrated interests could wish India to keep its GSP status: this would make imported inputs for U.S. companies cheaper. By withdrawing the GSP status, the U.S. government is hurting both U.S. consumers and producers, who depend on inputs from India.
Of course, greater sharing of power would reduce the problems of global inequality. This is why effective altruism should be promoted among powerful groups, such as trade professionals, I think. This is not to say that everyone should not adapt this philosophy.
It is true that liberalization arguably hurt economies before, for example during the 1970s, when the IMF institutionalized Structural Adjustment Programs. However, with the rise of global value chain development, the situation today is different. Trade liberalization promotes sustainable development as opposed to prevents it. I argue this above (response to jmason) and you can find arguments for in Richard Baldwin’s The Great Convergence and here. Since these sources may suffer from ‘Western’ bias, please counter me, if possible.
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Yes, it is interesting how a human life can be simply valued in monetary terms. However, this is not to say that lives of individuals of different income levels have different values. Rather, these lives are valued equally. However, what the calculations of the values of QALY show is how much it costs to provide a quality life-year to an individual. I will clarify this point in my revised draft. It seems absolutely moral, rather, most moral, to me, to spend finances where they provide the most healthy years of life. Although, having enough to provide quality lives for all is even better. Again, that is why EA should spread.
I am not sure if I am sufficiently aware of the exceptions to money = wellbeing rule. For me, money must be invested the most cost-effectively to meet the most needs of the most. These needs can be understood both as those on the Maslow hierarchy and those described by Max Neef.
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Universal 12-years of education should not be promoted worldwide because there are other more urgent issues that will help sustainable development of nations better than investing scarce resources into education. Plus, schooling in emerging economies may not be adequate (e.g. in relatively developed South Africa, most teachers do not pass exams for grades below those which they teach; in emerging economies, it is common to beat children as opposed to nurture inquiry and understanding; and, education in former colonies suffers from the bias of raising elites (formerly ruling class) while leaving everyone behind without the ability to catch up).
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Please keep your bold comments. At the same time, do not be offended if people do not reply or downvote (see how many of my posts are left without replies and I am just fine—I did what I could to share my perspective). I can both try to improve the ability of my messages to be well received and try to reach a more receptible audience.
on writing. 1) it takes time, 2) this forum privileges english speakers 3) the emphasis on writing becomes a hurdle for people for whom skill in written communication is so-so
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the exceptions to money = well being rule are Jamaica, Costa Rica, Kerala, China (pre 1979 reforms), Sri Lanka, Mauritius, Cuba, South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong (pre 1999), Japan (Meiji reforms). In all these countries(kerala is a state) focus on basic education preceded health and wealth, this is the fast path to human development.
The slow path is by focusing on money, trade, industrialization at the expense of basic education and health. India is an average example of this slow path. South Africa is an almost perfect example of doing the wrong things, and crawling on the slow path.
EA community is on the slow path unfortunately. Ignoring the most important component of the human development index, which is basic education. Give Well even going as far as saying “We do not place much intrinsic value on increasing time in school or tests”
I fully agree with you that education in say India is geared towards elites, which means college and professional education, while neglecting basic education which should be the emphasis for any society.
Regarding the Great Convergence, I will say that it is a great convergence in education first and then everything is a consequence.
https://ourworldindata.org/global-rise-of-education
Also, the ‘Great Convergence’ in education is an outcome of increasing global output, which is based on higher trade.
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Currently, in developing countries, teachers beat children. Further, ‘educated’ children can recite information that is useful to industrialization. However, inquiry and critical thinking as well as the willingness and ability to advocate for a cause is stifled in schools. Thus, before children are en masse enrolled into this destructive post-colonial education system, should this system be reformed?
hey, thanks for the conversation
My research shows that it is the other way around, first comes education, which results in better health and finally better incomes.
Going back to the very first example that I gave: Pakistan until recently had more money than India, and even today is ahead of Bangladesh. However Bangladesh has better life expectancy than India which in turn has better life expectancy than Pakistan.
In terms of education Pakistan has always lagged India and Bangladesh and continues to do so, the money that they have does not seem to have helped. Side note Bangladesh lags India in education, but still is ahead in terms of some human development indicators, they are doing something right that I don’t fully understand.
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The problems of education systems are serious, it would be good if they are fixed. But fixing them before children are enrolled means that the kids get no education at all. Even flawed education is better than no education. I note that the person in the TED talk is talking about British system of education, the talk has no relevance in agricultural countries with first generation learners.
I agree the educational systems are deeply flawed, but they are not destructive. Whoever is not reached by those flawed educational systems is left behind.
Hello Lucy,
This actually makes a lot of sense (e.g. if one cannot read they cannot learn further; perhaps even children in severely lacking schools learn to read). Actually, what do you think is the most cost-effective method of providing children (any) education?
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This too, I believe, is the case, at least at the national level. Only for me, education means “productive know-how,” or education which is useful to improved health and employment outcomes, so for example education on hygiene, usefulness of hospitals (e.g. here), and education that finds people jobs or enables them to build their own successful businesses. This education may be ‘imported’ from abroad, for example if highly skilled foreign investors employ and give health insurance to their employees.
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Yes, there may be different factors that come into play when it comes to India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh that determine the life expectancy in these countries. Is Bangladesh (and India?) the darling of foreign developers? Or, is it that Bangladesh deregulates its abundant labor market which leads to cheap labor and thus foreign investment? Does Bangladesh benefit from its coastal location that makes it an ideal spot for distribution of products to Asia, as well as importing inputs for cheap?
In India, is it the country’s digitization program (such as with IndiaStack) that supports the nation’s development?
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Yes, the speaker in the TED talk is commenting on the British system of education. I know it is a bit of a stretch. But, the British system has, I think, remained in former British colonies.
Figure out why they are not in school, enroll them in school, make sure they attend, and finally see if there are any easy interventions that can be made (like teaching at right level). But most important keep kids in school for 12 years of schooling even if they seem to be learning nothing on tests.
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the India case is clear, they did a better job of educating kids than Pakistan. Bangladesh is behind India but not too far behind in educational terms, my guess is that they spend more on primary healthcare than India which can explain the difference in life expectancy.
Ok, thanks!!
I know it takes time. But the more you practice the less time it takes.
This is really interesting. I learned that Costa Rica was able to develop because it passed laws and developed infrastructure which attracted the foreign investment of Intel.
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I also studied that Singapore advanced because of its geographical advantage and trade policy: this enabled Singapore to become Asia’s major port. As per this article, Singapore first supported low-skill (little education needed) manufacturing sector through industrial policy. Only with rapid growth, Singapore was able to invest into the education of its labor force and create more sophisticated products. The current comparative advantage in high-skill production enables Singapore to benefit from further investment into education.
The question is whether countries that are comparatively disadvantaged in skill should invest into education, in order to progress within the global value chains. Perhaps. This is actually what India does. India invests into its services (high-skill) sectors, such as IT and pharmaceuticals, trying to move its labor force from manufacturing for which little education is needed.
But, are you talking more about universal primary education as opposed to sector-specific upskilling?
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With its liberal trade policy, Hong Kong developed because it has functioned as an intermediary between foreign investors and China.
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There have been much more people in poverty in China before 1979 than after. This is because China liberalized its trade. The post-1979 economic growth enabled China to invest more into education. However, the important reason of Chinese growth is that it copied foreign intellectual property.
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I am not sure if Jamaica, Sri Lanka, Mauritius, and Cuba benefited from their prioritization of education. Is it that people in these countries are much better educated than the average citizens of nations of the same wealth (GDP/capita) levels? If so, how do these people benefited? Because of their education are their healthier? Happier? Better able to advocate for themselves?
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Further, I believed that Japan developed because the United States did not punish it for copying the U.S. intellectual property. This was because of the U.S.-Japan military alliance.
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I am not sure about South Korea, Kerala and Chinese Taipei.
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The above examples imply that although knowledge is important, it is more cost-effective to copy/access foreign know-how in order to advance economically. A higher government revenue enables nations to invest more into education, in absolute terms. Thus, government investment into education may increase as a result of prioritization of trade and industrialization in the first place.
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In percentage terms, South Africa spends on education almost twice that what Japan invests into education (in % of GDP terms). Does this contradict your point that Japan prioritizes education and South Africa fails to support education sufficiently?
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This makes sense that the EA community does not value outputs as much as outcomes of education. If positive outputs of education (e.g. expected education levels of children under 18 years of age of different genders) fail to create positive (e.g. “earnings or health”) outcomes—this is, if even highly educated people cannot find jobs and suffer from poor health, for instance as measured by U5MR, then we should not be investing into education: this investment does ‘nothing good.’ I think that is what the article you are referring to is arguing. The same is argued by this impact evaluation manual of the World Bank. Thus, if keeping children in school is not very beneficial to them, maybe something else, such as deworming, may be a better option to invest your donations. If children suffer from schistosomiasis (intestinal worms) then cannot focus and so gain little from the time they spend in school. Does this make sense?
Meta note: I am talking about primary and secondary education which is equivalent to high school education is US. Some schooling systems have vocational/trade school in years 10-12, instead of college track courses. Either way kids are staying in school for twelve years.
The country examples of the fast path that I gave “violate the money = well being rule”, and show how some countries had better education and health before they became rich.
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In all the examples that I gave Jamaica, Sri Lanka, Mauritius, Cuba, Japan(Meiji era), Kerala, China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Costa Rica etc.. people became much better educated than their counterparts in other countries with similar levels of income (GDP/per capita)
Educated citizens benefitted by being healthier, knowing how to avoid disease, when to go to doctor, how to follow instructions, being better able to advocate for themselves. Knowledge of human biology led to desire to control fertility, which in turn led to use of contraceptives, this also involves negotiating fertility in a marriage, which the husbands usually control in agricultural societies. Being able to understand and participate in modern societies is enhanced by education.
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Not true. Countries that prioritized trade and industrialization stayed on the slow path. E.g. India with its efforts on import substitution industrialization policies, while neglecting basic education and health, this has continued even after opening up the economy with the result that India is far behind China, and is behind Bangladesh in some human development indicators (life expectancy in India is 68 vs 72 in Bangladesh), despite rapid economic growth.
Also if trade is so important, why were China and India so far behind at independence? After all China opened its economy to free (opium) trade, and India was ruled by UK, the leading light of industrialization and trade.
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Costa Rica, my knowledge is from HPA (1989) where Sen and Dreze talk about Costa Rica as a model from which lessons could be learnt. This is prior to intel’s investment in 1995.
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Regarding Singapore basic education was an important part of what it did right. This report sheds more light. Industrial policy, trade etc were the other things that they did right.
Countries that have universal primary education and 50% secondary education (high school equivalent) have done best, link.
Manufacturing jobs require 8-12 years of schooling. That may seem like low skill or little education, but it is an extraordinary achievement for countries that are primarily agricultural.
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Sen has a lot to say about China ” By 1979, when the economic reform came, the Chinese life expectancy was already 68 years; the Indian life expectancy was 54 years, 14 years behind it.”
“There are really major lessons there, and I might say also one of the unsung contributions of the pre-reform educational and health care expansion is, I believe, the radical economic expansion that took place in the 1980s. After the economic reform, it would have been very hard without the base of elementary education which China had and India did not at that time, which is still a factor which bothers India badly.” https://asiasociety.org/amartya-sen-what-china-could-teach-india-then-and-now
“Look at Kerala’s policy for universal education and universal healthcare. The Communist Party first come into office in 1957, they declared their policy in 1960. 1963 I’m in Delhi teaching in Delhi School of Economics and people ask me “Do you think it’s feasible?” I said “absolutely feasible”. Primarily for one economic reason, namely that you need far less money than you would need in, say, Britain to provide that level of healthcare and education.
This argument is not very sophisticated but on the other hand it could make a dramatic difference between life and death. Many of my colleagues at Delhi School of Economics said that I’m just leading people up the garden path, as an economist I should criticise, because Kerala was the third poorest state in India then. How could they afford it? And my claim was the economic argument. Also there being externalities and the “public good feature” as economists call it. I was certain that on top of that, for reasons which we began with, that the policies would also stimulate economic growth and development. In the latest round of national sample survey, if you put the urban and rural together, Kerala has now the highest per capita income in the whole of India. I would have thought some people who thought I was leading people up the garden path would say that they were mistaken. Have I got such statements? I’m afraid I have not! Am I happy that my expectations have been fulfilled? Yes, very happy indeed. Not for myself, that’s a trivial thing. But the fact that a people-friendly education and health policy could make a difference, not only to their lives – which happened immediately, life expectancy shot up in Kerala straight away – but also ultimately on economic growth” https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/southasia/2015/11/19/india-is-the-only-country-in-the-world-trying-to-become-a-global-economic-power-with-an-uneducated-and-unhealthy-labour-force-amartya-sen/
Sure China could invest more in education once it became rich, but how was China in 1979 able to have universal primary education and more than 50% of its kids under 18 finish 9th grade?
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Japan under Meiji Restoration was 1860-1900, we can be sure that the rise of Japan pre first world war had nothing to do with US- Japan military alliance.
I am not talking about “development” which in EA means money, I am talking about how health and education levels changed in the timeframe 1860-1900 when the country was poor.
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Regarding South Africa and Japan, Japan today is an aging society with low fertility rate and hence less kids needing to be educated. It makes sense that they spend less on education. The other way in which Japan is different is that Japan has 4 generations of educated people for the last 100 years, South Africa is full of second generation learners even today, and virtually nobody has gone to college. It makes sense that they are spending money on education today.
I should have been more clearer the “developed” South Africa with its apartheid regime pre 1994 did not invest in education and those effects are still being felt today, good for them that the current democratic government is spending on education. Even so Bangladesh which is four times poorer has an additional 10 years of life expectancy over South Africa
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Deworming is so cheap because it leverages preexisting schools, I did donate to deworming charities a few years ago. The goal of deworming is two fold, to improve health and to improve education. If you read Give Wells reports they only place value on improvements in health!!! Why are the educational gains unimportant Give Well?
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The most respected and widely used index for measuring human well being is the human development index, it includes education as an outcome, valuable for its own sake, the EA community has to explain why it deems education not useful while the UNDP thinks that it is important.
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It’s not for the lack of money that the world is in the state that is in today.
“The lack of political commitment not of financial resources, is often the real cause of human neglect. That is the main conclusion of Human Development Report 1991”
Human priority concerns according to UNDP are Basic Education, Basic Health, Water supply and sanitation, Nutrition programs and Family planning services.
The 1996 HDR is interesting http://hdr.undp.org/sites/default/files/reports/257/hdr_1996_en_complete_nostats.pdf
“Why is income part of the human development index? Longevity and education are clearly valuable aspects of a good life”
“A new measure of national wealth
Economists had long assumed that the main component of a country’s productive wealth is physical capital (“produced assets”). But according to the World Bank’s assessment for 192 countries, physical capital on average accounts for only 16% of total wealth. More important is natural capital, which accounts for 20%. And more important still is human capital, which accounts for 64%.”
“In 1960 Pakistan and the Republic of Korea had similar incomes. Rut they had very different primary school enrolment ratios-30% in Pakistan, 94% in the Republic of Korea one of the main reasons that over the next 25 years the per capita GDP of the Republic of Korea grew to three times that of Pakistan.”
“Even “unskilled” workers in a modern factory need the literacy, numeracy and discipline learned in primary and lower-secondary school”
“It generally is easier to deal with the “good human development and poor growth” problem than with the opposite-poor human development with good growth.”
“Experience suggests that no country undergoes a structural transformation of the economy without raising basic education levels. The well-known links between female education and fertility, between education and productivity and between mother’s education and children’s educational attainment all explain why this is so”
Hello Lucy,
This is compelling.
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Because authoritarian economies lower worker and environmental rights more easily than democracies. This attracts foreign investment which promoted industrial growth. This is independent of education levels of the host economy (works for both highly skilled and low-skill workers).
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Thank you for the information. This shows Singapore has been investing into education since before it industrialized. Hmm.. this could point on the notion that education precedes industrialization and development.
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I do not see a causation to be proven in this paper. Only correlation is shown.
Can you please provide evidence of this? I believe that manufacturing becomes so disaggregated (Baldwin, The Great Convergence) that it comes to the point that one worker ‘connects the blue cable’ the other worker ‘puts on a case’ and eventually ‘a smartphone is made.’
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This is interesting. It seems like India is doing many good things for its citizens. For example, I heard from Mr. Nandan Nilekani about the ID digitization of India, which, as he reports, supported the growth of the nation.
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I am not sure, maybe skewed statistics of the authoritarian government? Maybe the firm rule of the authoritarian government?
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Point noted. Clearly, I should learn more about the Meiji Restoration in Japan.
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This makes sense that the % of GDP spent on education should take the fraction of school-age population. Perhaps this point should be brought to the World Bank which omits the educational spending indicator adjusted for % of school-aged children?
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I have studied a similar topic in Cape Town.
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Perhaps because educational gains are not as easily measurable as health outcomes? Because donors do connect with others health suffering (also get sick) but do not connect with others problems that arise due to low education (this is less of a problem among affluent donors in affluent economies)? Because educational-outcomes RTC studies have not been pursued en masse?
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… in addition to the health outcomes RCT researchers (e.g. of JPAL and IPA) who may neglect educational attainment for its own sake, assuming spillovers into other areas. Actually, do you have any work to support that better education will lead to better health, employment, and wellbeing outcomes?
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I would imagine that today, the numbers shift more toward human capital. This is because investments into education may be costly. However, it may not be the case with rising digitization of education—e.g. once an online/digital curriculum is developed, there is little additional costs of educating marginal users.
Actually, does the report value “human capital” as the total cost of ones education (p. 51)?
Amartya Sen explains
https://www.theguardian.com/education/2003/oct/28/schools.uk4 https://www.ucl.ac.uk/ioe/news/2017/jun/whats-use-education-nobel-prize-winner-professor-amartya-sen-launches-ioe-centre-education-and
OK, thank you.
The Guardian article cites: “use of the opportunities of global commerce for the reduction of poverty have drawn on help from basic education on a wide basis.” This means that education, given favorable trade environment, will reduce poverty [and thus improve wellbeing].
I am glad that the IOE Centre for Education and International Development exists/thrives.
Not sure what you are saying here, under the British, India was deliberately deindustrialized, and made to produce primary commodities. That is the reason why India was so behind. Trade between the West and China had negative effects on China (opium trade).
causation in social sciences is very hard, the time period (30 years) and the number of countries (101) give me confidence in the results.
“The whole idea that you could somehow separate out the process of economic growth from the quality of the labour force is a mistake against which Adam Smith warned in 1776.” https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/southasia/2015/11/19/india-is-the-only-country-in-the-world-trying-to-become-a-global-economic-power-with-an-uneducated-and-unhealthy-labour-force-amartya-sen/
“For India to match China in its range of manufacturing capacity — its ability to produce gadgets of almost every kind, with increasing use of technology and better quality control — it needs a better-educated and healthier labor force at all levels of society.” https://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/20/opinion/why-india-trails-china.html
Unfortunately, India is doing so-so, Kerala is an exception and one of the best developed states in India today, the rest of India did not focus on education and lagged behind.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Indian_states_and_territories_by_Human_Development_Index
This is not about economic growth, this is about how investments in education and health by the 3rd poorest state in India 50 years ago, took it to the top of the country 20 years later where it has stayed since then.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerala_model
how about: Poor countries have enough resources to educate their people, IFF there is political will. China had the political will so did Kerala(India), Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka.
In all the examples that I gave education is at the root.
Sri Lanka, Cuba, Jamaica, and Kerala education was the cause of better health. South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong, it was the cause of both better health and wealth.
I read the book, it only talks about the successful economies and then only about trade. Nothing about the initial conditions, policies and how they created todays countries.
A much better book is Resurgent Asia https://www.wider.unu.edu/publication/resurgent-asia
Not sure what you are saying here, under the British, India was deliberately deindustrialized, and made to produce primary commodities. That is the reason why India was so behind. Trade between the West and China had negative effects on China (opium trade).
-This implies that adding more value to exports domestically may enable nations to thrive.
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causation in social sciences is very hard, the time period (30 years) and the number of countries (101) give me confidence in the results.
-Well, effective altruists may like proven causation. Otherwise they cannot be sure that education leads to growth. What if growth leads to education? What if something else (maybe international investment??) leads to both growth and education?
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-Are you criticizing that India aims to educate few elites (e.g. in engineering and IT) leaving others behind? Should India sacrifice some of its growth to more inclusive education?
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how about: Poor countries have enough resources to educate their people, IFF there is political will. China had the political will so did Kerala(India), Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka.
-Well, if there is political will, countries may choose to invest into issues other than education, if they believe that will help that country’s competitiveness. Perhaps, if the SDG goal of inclusive education is highlighted, then India would invest more into meeting that objective?
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I read the book, it only talks about the successful economies and then only about trade. Nothing about the initial conditions, policies and how they created todays countries.
-I agree. It hints on the latter.
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-Thank you. I have the book.
If growth leads to education, then why is South Africa behind Jamaica and India, how about Bangladesh > Pakistan? Sri Lanka > Brazil? The country studies and understanding the history of various countries and cross comparisons across time and space help understanding root causes.
Frankly EA is far from understanding root causes of human development, if I had to drop one index from HDI I would have dropped money not education.
Its very strange EA says education has no value, but they want evidence, thinking, papers, books. If education is so critical to the functioning of EA then why does EA assume that it is not important for the well being of illiterate societies?
Both money and education are big items, we can be reasonably sure that we did not miss out small things that have outsize effect. Let’s take deworming, it has enormous positive effects (assuming deworming increases schooling by 10+ years/100 $USD). This is great on the marginal side for individual EA’s. If one takes the systemic view then the cost of schools, cost of enrolling kids, retention, attendance costs all matter. Put all these things together and schooling costs should be 5% of GDP, there maybe marginal improvements maybe 4% is enough, but we can be sure .4% will not be enough.
There is no tradeoff between growth and inclusive education.
I gave link earlier “The Demography of Educational Attainment and Economic Growth”
“Scenario 4 finally presents another possible direction of improvement from the baseline (which somewhat resembles the case of India), in which half of the population remains without education although 5% have tertiary education, 15% secondary, and 30% primary. This case of elitist education in a context with half of the population being without any schooling does clearly better than the baseline and even better than the universal primary education (combined with 10% secondary and no tertiary), but falls far short of the economic growth implied by universal primary combined with 50% secondary and no tertiary education”
India fell short on growth because they did not educate their population, China did a better job and hence its economy is better. Amartya Sen says the same.
If India’s education was inclusive and not elitist, India would be better off in education terms, health, and finally in money. See China, or Kerala.
I am not a fan of speculating about how I can influence politics, Amartya Sen has been a voice of reason, his book Hunger and Public Action is still timely for EA even today. Sen has voiced his opinions and governments know where he stands.
The political will of China, Cuba, Kerala comes from their ideology all three places being communist (in the past, and to varying degrees). Communists have historically given great importance to education, health and equality. It shows in their results. They cared for industrialization too but health, education, and equality were their primary values.
Of course there are others who gave similar importance to health, education Singapore, South Korea come to mind.
The common thread is the priority or importance given to education and health. Money is not the most important factor in improving health and education in poor countries.
Sen says
“Finally, it is important to note that despite the gigantic size of excess mortality in the Chinese famine, the extra mortality in India from regular deprivation in normal times vastly overshadows the former. Comparing India’s death rate of 12 per thousand with China’s of 7 per thousand, and applying that difference to the Indian population of 781 million in 1986, we get an estimate of excess normal mortality in India of 3.9 million per year. This implies that every eight years or so more people die in India because of its higher regular death rate than died in China in the gigantic famine of (p.215) 1958–61.37 India seems to manage to fill its cupboard with more skeletons every eight years than China put there in its years of shame.”
https://www.oxfordscholarship.com/view/10.1093/0198283652.001.0001/acprof-9780198283652-chapter-11
“If growth leads to education, then why is South Africa behind Jamaica and India, how about Bangladesh > Pakistan? Sri Lanka > Brazil”
Because it’s not the only factor?
“Its very strange EA says education has no value”
‘EA’ does not say this, and I don’t know anyone involved in EA who holds such a strong view.
So what other factors are there? Is EA valuing money too much?
“We do not place much intrinsic value on increasing time in school or test scores” https://www.givewell.org/international/technical/programs/education
Out of the half a billion dollars that was given to “global health and development” via GW or influenced by it. Exactly zero dollars went to education. Deworming according to Esther Duflo increases time in school, but GW analysis found that it did not increase time in school (or was insignificant) so we can discount it as going toward education.
Give Well did only 2 reports on education, one in 2009, and another in 2018. They came up empty.
The overall importance given to education is zero.
See my question Global basic education as a missing cause priority
You quote GiveWell as saying:
But you cut off the quote in a very misleading way indeed:
Unless you think spending time in school is very useful even if it has no other benefits to kids (i.e. they don’t learn anything they use later in life), GiveWell is surely right here that the benefits are mostly instrumental.
It is wrong to quote others in a way that misrepresents their view like this.
You also say:
GiveWell just didn’t think the very best giving opportunities they could support were in education — that doesn’t mean they think it has no value. They also didn’t buy people food, but presumably they don’t think eating is a useless activity and people can safely starve themselves.
GiveWell isn’t all of EA. Some EAs probably have a very positive view of the value of education. There’s a wide range of views on most issues.
From Education for All: is the world on track? EFA global monitoring report, 2002 by UNESCO
As Sen puts it, “it is often asked whether certain political or social freedoms, such as the liberty of political participation and dissent, or opportunities to receive basic education, are or are not ‘conducive to development’. In the light of the more foundational view of development as freedom, this way of posing the question tends to miss the important understanding that these substantive freedoms (that is, the liberty of political participation or the opportunity to receive basic education or health care) are among the constituent components of development. Their relevance for development does not have to be freshly established through their indirect contribution to the growth of GNP or to the promotion of industrialization.”
Hence, education counts as a ‘valuable being or doing’, as an ‘end’ of development.
It seems that the fundamental disagreement between you and some others is that you associate intrinsic value to time spent in school, while others believe that being in school is worthy only if it brings students positive health and income outcomes.
For example, you may believe that if a third grade student who fell behind in their first grade due to post-colonial education and is not learning anything anymore should be kept in school, e.g. where teachers beat children and fail the exams of grades below those which they teach, for another eight years, because school is good on its own.
Others may believe that a third-grade student who fell behind in their first grade does not need to attend the school where the only thing they learn is that they cannot do what is required from them, teachers cannot help them, and they receive beating for this situation. Instead, the finances which would be otherwise spent on keeping this student in school should be spent on, e.g. deworming, because this will enable the student to be healthy, energetic, and free, helping their family business.
you captured the disagreement well
not just me UNDP, Amartya Sen, Malala Yousafzai assume that time spent in school has intrinsic value. I along with them want better schools, better teaching etc.. but the quality of the schooling system should detract from the fact that schooling has value.
https://www.cgdev.org/blog/does-education-need-qaly-and-lays-it “The non-pecuniary returns to education—child health, delayed pregnancy and marriage, democratic participation and so on—are substantial in education systems that otherwise perform dismally on test scores (e.g. the positive impacts of secondary schooling in Ghana despite low gain in learning shown in Duflo, Dupas & Kremer 2017).
Looking across countries (Figure 2), there is precisely zero relationship between school quality (measured by the World Bank Harmonized Learning Outcomes) and the labour market rate of return on investment in schooling.”
So what seems like bad schooling in terms of test scores, still has instrumental and intrinsic value.
I am not in favor of punishment, yes schools in agricultural societies do beat children. Worse still in the classroom sometimes they face discrimination, made to sit apart from other kids based on caste etc.. Race in USA and South Africa played that same role.
Even so education is better, because tomorrow they grow up, teach in their own communities, or put pressure on governments for change. e.g. the civil rights movement in the US, which BTW had a lot of moral help from newly independent countries, and was a factor in Brown vs Board https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_v._Board_of_Education#Background
Most countries independence leaders went to college in Western countries, we can be sure that they faced racism from society and from the colleges they went to. The education was useful nevertheless.
deworming is so cheap because kids are in school. if they are not in school, you cant deworm them because the medicine is given in school.
Also J-PAL headlines deworming with “Deworming to increase school attendance” https://www.povertyactionlab.org/case-study/deworming-schools-improves-attendance-and-benefits-communities-over-long-term
Implicitly they assume education has intrinsic value.
no question the health benefits of deworming are important
“free” is a fantasy, most kids want to go to school, despite the poor learning environment.
the “family business” is tending to cows, farming, household chores etc., it should be considered similar to child labor.
Safeena Husain says
I have to say, I have been doing this for over a decade, and I have never met a girl who said to me, you know, “I want to stay at home,” “I want to graze the cattle,” “I want to look after the siblings,” “I want to be a child bride.” Every single girl I meet wants to go to school. And that’s what we really want to do.
UNDP (United Nations Development Programme) assumes education has intrinsic value, so do I.
UNDP in 1996 Human Development Report page 50 asks the question “Why is income part of the human development index?” For them it is obvious that “Longevity and education are clearly valuable aspects of a good life” they then go on to explain why income should be included in the index.
In this thread I asked the question earlier
“The most respected and widely used index for measuring human well being is the human development index, it includes education as an outcome, valuable for its own sake, the EA community has to explain why it deems education not useful while the UNDP thinks that it is important.”
and also as a post Global basic education as a missing cause priority
And that is the crux of the disagreement. I (and UNDP) believe Education like health has intrinsic value, whereas Give Well and the EA community does not.
Let me unpack this. The time spent in school has benefits for kids even if the benefits do not show up in terms of health, wealth. Why? It changes outlook towards life, makes married life less unequal for women, increases self-respect, self-confidence, allows for better participation in society.
Rethinking the Value of Education: Amartya Sen and the Capability Approach Dr. Sunday Olaoluwa Dada http://internationaljournalcorner.com/index.php/theijhss/article/view/126772/87663
“There are aspects of human flourishing that education enhances that are neglected by the human capital approach. This is the aspect of education enabling human being to live freely and fully. The development of human capacity to think and reason. This facilitates the ability of individuals who are educated to exercise critical reasoning about their lives and about the society in which they live. ”
From an evolutionary standpoint , our large plastic brains and long childhood is designed to absorb knowledge via cultural transmission. Kids who go to school are soaked in the enormous changes in knowledge of the industrial era, and absorb the values of industrial era(modern values). Kids who don’t go to school are stuck with much less knowledge, are stuck with values of agricultural era (patriarchal values)
I actually agree with GiveWell on this, food has no intrinsic value only instrumental value. However education is very different, it has intrinsic value.
No. Give Well assumed that education by itself had no value. Then they looked for the effects of education on health and earnings and find ” very little evidence of effects of education on health outcomes” “evidence that education increases earnings is currently thin”
The report by GiveWell is poorly done, which itself is a sign of the importance given to education.
I appreciate and understand the difference. However GW is the most respected organization with great influence among EA’s interested in the space of Global Human Well Being. Anybody reading about EA (from the outside) easily sees that Global Health And Development is a cause priority.
So while some EA’s might have different views or even a wide range of views. The EA community as a whole gives very little (zero) importance to education.
“changes outlook towards life, makes married life less unequal for women, increases self-respect, self-confidence, allows for better participation in society”
I agree these are all benefits, but I class them as instrumental benefits, and imagine most others here do as well.
They are benefits inasmuch as they go on to improve people’s well-being.
“the human development index, it includes education as an outcome, valuable for its own sake”
The HDI also includes GDP which presumably nobody thinks is valuable for its own sake (i.e. widgets are only useful inasmuch as they make people better off when they’re used not valuable merely for existing). In my opinion education is good to have in the HDI as a proxy for all of the many instrumental benefits it provides people.
Most people here place great weight on a welfarist theory of value: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/well-being/ . If you disagree with welfarism then it would pay to set education aside for a minute and go back and discuss more fundamental issues in moral philosophy.
I will read the philosophy link, but I am not a fan of reading philosophy. Amartya Sen says that education has intrinsic value, he is a professor of philosophy (if you care for that sort of thing). In this thread I had a quote from Sen/UNDP where they say that education is a goal in itself like health. https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/mC8NMNnaTKzYsL8jk/effective-altruism-and-international-trade#kDjYFcFhsDZNrDWvW
The last time I had this discussion about intrinsic values, I was sent to read another SEP article, this is what it said
“One of the most comprehensive lists of intrinsic goods that anyone has suggested is that given by William Frankena ….consciousness,.… truth; knowledge and true opinions of various kinds, understanding, wisdom;”
Education brings about changes in consciousness, truth, knowledge and true opinions of various kinds, understanding, wisdom.
Or simply education is knowledge, understanding, wisdom, truth etc.. Education has intrinsic value.
Quoting myself from earlier in the thread “Frankly EA is far from understanding root causes of human development, if I had to drop one index from HDI I would have dropped money not education.”
Also see how Ashweetha thinks about education https://www.ted.com/talks/ashweetha_shetty_how_education_helped_me_rewrite_my_life
no matter how you class them, EA headlining money and health as a cause priority while dropping education. + spending no money on education is straight out saying a lot about the priorities of EA.
EA gives zero value to education, and that is fundamentally wrong.
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Thanks anonymous_ea
I agree that EA is not working in every area, and that is cool. How about
“EA gives very little value to education, and that is fundamentally wrong.”
On what basis has EA dropped Education from the headline? Why do they think UNDP is wrong? Why is HDI wrong?
Which is why this whole conversation is strange to me, people clearly see the value of education for themselves but not for others!
Malala in her nobel prize lecture put it beautifully “It is not time to tell the world leaders to realize how important education is — they already know it — their own children are in good schools. Now it is time to call them to take action for the rest of the world’s children.
We ask the world leaders to unite and make education their top priority.”
Yay.. another set of my comments gets downvoted without any response.
I think what would really resolve your debate would be associating a quality of life measure to education outcomes as well as to time spent in school. See Whitehead and Ali on assigning health-related quality of life (HRQoL) value to different health outcomes.
:) brb243
I would be happy for more research
Usually people use LAYS but that has its problems.
Does Education Need a QALY and Is LAYS It?
Even so comparing health to money itself is a moral decision and depends on ones intuitions and preferences without clear answers. e.g. Give Well values doubling of income for one year = .6 years of life I value the same doubling of income at less than .1 years
Who is right?
EA community values education (by itself) at zero, so does Give Well. I value 1 year of education = 1 year of life
Putting the two together I value 1 year of education = 6 years of income
Who is right?
Thanks for the article!!
I think that everyone will be right if LAYS (the unit of quality education provided) is linked to QALYs (the unit of quality life years provided).
Please submit a request to the World Bank (which developed LAYS) and the UK Medical Research Council (which aims to improve the QALY measure).
Perhaps, Western education empowers some (e.g. females) through the socio-economic prospects that education gives them. Thus, the traditionally disenfranchised individuals gain power over those they have been traditionally subject to (e.g. males). Yet, these educated females are still subject to a discriminatory norm—that which is based on their financial situation and is imposed by the West.
Thus, these females may ‘trade’ their submission to males to their submission to ‘the rich.’ Therefore, although education may seem to empower otherwise industrially unskilled individuals, it may reduce the power which these individuals draw from adhering to traditional norms. So, the “modern values” which the “industrial era” education instills in children may not have an intrinsic worth—it always depends on the normative structure of achievement through which you look at the issue.
This may be why GW highly values measurable health outcomes. Empowerment is hard to measure and relative. Yet, GiveDirectly supported research that measured beneficiaries’ psychological improvements—measured the level of cortisol in GD’s program’s participants’ saliva.
Do you think GW should assign more value to improvements in psychological wellbeing, which stem, for example, from self-perceptions of one’s improved critical thinking abilities and empowerment?
Education benefits are for boys too, not just girls. Girls dont gain power over boys, after all USA is still male dominated. Educated girls gain a little more power, so that cannot be dominated to the extent that they were in agricultural societies.
From my understanding the “support” that women get in traditional societies is very stifling. Ghoonghat, Burka, citing woman for wearing bikini in France, honor killings, ban on dating, obsession with virginity, early marriage, lots of kids, abortion of girl child, the problems are endless. They are not solved in the industrial era, but life for women is much better.
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Sure psychological well-being can be considered, but data is hard to come by. I simply assume that every year of education is worth a year of life. That itself make Educate Girls as effective as GW charities.
Well, is it then that affluent females gain emancipation through using the products of low-paid low-skilled laborers, males and females, in developing countries?
Or, do well-to-do females use impoverished females’ work more than that of poor males, since the rich women outsource ‘traditionally their’ work, such as household care, to foreign domestic workers?
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It would be interesting to quantify the quality of life associated with unit educational gains, for example by surveys similar to those described by Whitehead and Ali, which concern quality of life related to (mostly physical) health.
My writing and concern is not for affluent women, my concern is for the poor girls (and boys) who are not getting 6 years of education. Even if they get 12 years of education, they will not have enough earnings to hire anyone to work in their homes.
Educated women are better off in life (even without more money), because their married life is more equal, they have less number of kids, their husband’s family bosses them less, they can teach their kids, get small stuff done like deal with bank, interactions with society are better, they command respect etc.. The non woman specific things are positives for mens life too.
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I am happy to read and think about how to value education. I want the EA community to acknowledge that education has intrinsic value according to UN, and respond with why they don’t think it has intrinsic value.
UN reflects the voice of people around the world than EA community, https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/S2Sonawxz2cY4YdXK/ea-survey-2018-series-community-demographics-and
Likewise Malala is a much better voice of the values of people in agricultural societies than any EA organization i saw.
It is not that Malala or the UN are always right, they make mistakes too. A good starting point is to assume that they are correct, when we think they are wrong, we should act with great care and deliberation. Prove that they are wrong, dismiss the parts in which they are mistaken, act and follow the rest.
Sadly that is missing in EA.
Maybe, more than education by itself, you then value empowerment, equality, dignity, respect, lack of abuse, one’s ability to have a perspective which is valued, one’s ability to be considered as opposed to used, one’s ability to live for oneself as opposed to be forced to live for others, and an environment which is cooperative as opposed to abusive alongside the lines of characteristics assigned to an individual by society (at birth). Education is just means for achieving these goals.
In addition to all the benefits mentioned above I want to highlight ability to think for oneself, is much greater with educated people, ability to interact with society is much greater.
We could also say that we value health, because we can get up everyday, we can exist, we can drive, play a game, sing, dance, shower, walk, run, eat, see etc.. etc.. At some point such expansion becomes merely an enumeration of all the things that can be done if one is healthy, all those things are useful. Does such enumeration add any analytical value? I think not.
We simplify and say that health has intrinsic value. Likewise I believe education has intrinsic value.
When ones brain changes and gains capabilities, then it becomes intrinsic to that person and cannot be broken down into constituent pieces, merely for its effects.
My main thrust and criticism is not about what I think is valuable. UNDP, Amartya Sen, Malala all agree that education has intrinsic value, they say education is an end in itself.
Why does EA think otherwise? On what basis are they dismissing the voice of people in the agricultural era?
This has bothered me quite a lot. I have been clear and consistent that I think that education has intrinsic value and have focused on that aspect. This can be seen from comments and posts on the forum.
I had no intent to mislead, I don’t see what I wrote as misleading or misrepresenting. I quoted accurately and linked to the source.
If anything it is the EA community that is misleading folks. “Development” is widely understood to include education when used in the context of “developing” countries or the global poor. Saying “Global Development” and not including education is extremely misleading it took me 2 years of immersion in EA to finally understand that EA folks don’t include education when talking about “Global Development”
Maybe you should do a podcast on this.
The following URL needs to be fixed to say “Global Health and Income” or “Global Health and Poverty”, right now it’s misleading. https://www.effectivealtruism.org/articles/cause-profile-global-health-and-development/
This would be great, if this holds true. Intuitively, this makes sense: investments in human capital improve a nation’s productivity—the only thing is that returns on education are not immediate (and the “discount rate” in poor areas may be high—people may not like sacrificing present benefit for a ‘distant’ future gain). The delayed benefits may be an issue for poor and indebted countries.
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Yes, perhaps EA can look into the long-term gains of inclusive education? There is an RCT on the effectiveness of after-school tutoring in improving students’ learning outcomes. However, I am not sure about statistically robust research that examines the conditions under which education leads to health, income, and wellbeing improvements.
We humans are social animals, and pass knowledge from one generation to another via culture, uneducated parents expect that the lives of their will be similar to their own. Schools are outside their social expectations for what is good or useful for their kids. ‘Sacrificing ’ current benefits for future benefits is not the main issue, those calculations and thoughts don’t occur to illiterate parents. They expect their kids to have similar lives as them, a winning formula that worked for 10,000+ years.
you should read research from Wolfgang Lutz, Jesus Crespo Cuaresma, Warren Sanderson. It is statistically robust. I will also note that anthropology , sociology, demography are valid disciplines to reason about human societies, social policy. Math and statistics are not the only tools.
As far as RCT’s goes, RCT is good for finding short-term effects, and not very useful at finding effects that are long term in nature and those that have positive externalities like education.
Jean Dreze co-author with Sen in Hunger and Public Action and many other books has this to say about RCTs
https://thewire.in/economy/some-questions-around-the-use-of-evidence-based-policy
I understand that one may think as such – closeminded thinking which does not question tradition and blindly follows authoritarian structure.
However, with the arguable dominance of the Western authoritarian structure which assigns power to socio-economic status as defined by the norms of industrial economies, even illiterate parents may wish their children to succeed within these new, Western structures, if the parents believe for such possibility.
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Thank you, I am skimming this article by Lutz, Cuaresma, and Sanderson. Controlling for “human capital dynamics” in their regression, the authors find that “improvements in educational attainment are the key to explaining productivity and income growth.
But perhaps the authors solely argue (also here) that favorable educational dividend (a high ratio of educated to uneducated workers), rather than favorable demographic dividend (high ratio of productive-age to unproductive-age labor force) leads to national growth.
The claim on the benefits of education seems intuitive: the more educated workforce a nation has, the higher up within global value chains it is.
Yet, will you be able to provide any other statistical evidence that quantifies the returns on investments in education (in terms of income and health changes), particularly in the geographical areas where Educate Girls operates?
Sure they do, especially with exposure these days via media. However there is a differential in how much boys are sent to school vs girls. Age is also a factor: puberty is a big wall for the girl child in terms of going to school. Most parents send kids to school if one is accessible. Where schools are absent no one went to school. With MDG and SDG more focus has come on schools, they are now more accessible. Hence the increase in enrollment.
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The research from Lutz et all is highly recommended. Amartya Sen, Jean Dreze, Hans Rosling are also at the top of my list.
Yes there is no Demographic dividend, it is an education dividend.
This entry in Our World in Data is very good https://ourworldindata.org/global-rise-of-education
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Such data is hard to come by, even basic data like registrations of births, deaths is incomplete. If we look at the data from states of India we find that the relationship between education and health/income stands.
I would suggest moving away from requiring statistical evidence in every geographical area. Lets take medicine, first there is the research, then the RCT, then it comes to market. While the manufacturer should continue to monitor the effects of drug after the drug is in market, we dont expect them to run RCT in every country.
Like medicines the evidence for the benefits of education are robust and go a long way. We should be able to take that evidence as fact, and move on to finding out the best way to spread education to everybody. RCT can be used as a tool for this goal.
This is similar to how Duflo and others assume immunization is good, now they are working on getting everyone immunized and figuring out best way to do so via RCT.
As far as returns go, there is data on child mortality, maternal mortality, life expectancy, income by level of education. All of this data is approximate.
My calculations suggest that Educate Girls is 3-6 times more effective than most GW recommended charities and 30 times that of Give Directly. I dont take the estimates literally, I think they are good ballpark numbers.
OK, I read that there should be more RCT research on cost-effective methods of achieving favorable welfare outcomes through mass education, especially of disadvantaged students.