Ass Economics Iof Education
Ass Economics Iof Education
Ass Economics Iof Education
Education: the process of training and developing knowledge, skill, mind and
character etc especially by formal education (Websters, 1992, p. 461).
Opportunity cost is the value of what is forgone in order to have something else.
PPF- describes the various combination of final good and services that could be
produced in a given time period with available resources and technology (Schiller,
1994: p. 11).
PPC- illustrates essential principles
1. scarce resources
2. opportunity costs
1. Scarce resource- there is a limit to the amount we can produce in a given
time period with available resources and technology.
2. Opportunity cost: we obtain additional quantities of any desired good only by
reducing the potential production of another good.
5. Yes, we agreed
Education is both an investment and consumption. Consumption while schooling is
patly the consumption good for many people (i.e., individuals pursue an education
for the satisfaction and pleasure of the experience, it is also treated as most
individual as a clear investment in their feature ( Kaufman & Hotchkiss, 2006, p.
328-29).
A good investment is to calculate the internal rate of return and compare it with the
market rate of interest. If the internal rate of return is greater than or equal to the
market rate of interest, the investment is profitable (Kaufman & Hotchkiss, 2006; p.
329).
There are two alternative decision rules by which to determine weather or not
education is a good investment. An objection sometimes made is that people do not
really make decision this way. Two arguments, can be marshalized against this
objection. The first is that prospective college students do seem to be quite
cognizant of monitory benefits and costs of attending college.
The second way to judge the validity of human capital theory is to compare the
prediction of theory with actual behavior (Kaufman & Hotchkiss, 1006 p. 335).
6. Education and Productivity
Education raises the productivity of workers, the earning of educated reflect the
value of the product.
The economic case for educational investment hinges on the assumption that
education contribute to increased workers productivity. Earning differences as a
proxy for such productivity increases and have shown that more education does,
indeed, appear to be directly related to such earning differences. Thus entry
focuses directly on the education productivity relationship. The interpretation of
schooling is contribute to increased productivity assumed that the person with
additional education is in a position to make better decision. Productivity increases
due to education would be greater when those who get education enter occupations
where they can make decisions (Carnoy,1995)
7. Yes, earning differential is as part of human capital theory of the age earning
profile can be used to drive the difference between the earnings of the higher
education group and the earnings of the lower education group (Kaufman &
Hotchikis, 2006 p. 37).
People with more education will be expected to earn more money than people who
have less education (Cohn, 1979: p.40).
How opportunity cost increases as we move along with PPC. It reflects the difficulty
of moving resources from one production to another.
Efficiency
- Maximum output of a good from resources used in production.
- Means getting the most from what you have got i.e., using factors of
production in most productive way.
- As we move from point to point along the PPC we are seeing the most output
we can get from various labor (resource allocations). P. 13 Ibid.
8. Economics of Scale
- Reduction in minimum average costs that sum about through increases in the
size (scale) of plant and equipment (Schiller) 1994: 470
- In the long run, increase in input may result in proportionality greater
increases in output (Alburt, 1986, p. 410).
- A firm that experiences economics of scale notices that in the long run as the
quantity of output increases, the firm’s average cost (cost per unit of output)
falls. The long run average cost of production is declining when economics of
scale exist. Diseconomies of scale arise when, in the long run, the firm
realizes that the average cost per unit is rising as output expands.
- When we come to an education for instance, schools of a large size can
operate at lower per pupil costs other thing being equal (Cohn, 1979: p. 202).
Examples: a. textbook production
b. chairs production
c. reasonable increment of class size
(20è 25, 60 è 70)
Unit cost
- The type of cost that incurred per individual or per item or per school
and the like (Alpha p. 134).
The labor market at the different level of schooling may value individual
characteristics differently. The skills that are useful in jobs typically filled with
colleagues may differ greatly from skills that are rewarded in jobs that are typically
filled with high school colleagues. Therefore skill prices may vary across educational
categories (Uusitalo, 1999 p. 34).
The most important feature of LM that distinguishes is from other markets is that
the item being exchanged is embodied in human being.
The same conditions are not true in the labor market. Labor as a service is
inseparable from the person providing it and, thus the worker supplying labor and
the firm buying it must have direct, personal relations with each other. This, and the
fact that human beings have definite preferences with respect to the conditions
they work under, cause the exchange in the labor market to be determined not only
by the prices of labor but also by the cost of non-economic factors. That are largely
absent in commodity markets. This economic factors are partly physical in nature,
such as the risk of injury on the job or the pleasantness of the work environment,
and partly social in nature, such as the percentage of the job, the race or gender of
work mater, and the attitude of the management (Hotchkiss, 2006: p. 4-5).
Planning is the process of preparing a set of decisions for further action, approaches
to preparation usually differ according to circumstances, disciplines, problems and
individual country’s policies. And as planning generally consists of the three steps
mentioned above, the differences in approach can occur in any of these steps.
Approaches Characteristics
Social demand Educational demand oriented,
emphasis on educational input
Manpower requirement Labor demand oriented, emphasis on
educational output
Social cost benefit Cost & earning oriented, emphasis on
the labor market
Optimal allocation of resource Diversified objective, combined into a
social welfare function, emphasis on
limited resources.
In context of Ethiopia
1. Social demand approach in context of Ethiopia.
Assumption “Education is an affordable right.”
It seeks the involvement of political decisions
Expansion of primary, secondary, tertiary (higher education)
UPE
This entails Ethiopia to exercise the social demand approach
Cost benefit analysis is used to address only those types of alternatives when the
outcomes can be measured in terms of their monetary values. For example:
educational alternatives that are designed to raise productivity and income, such as
vocational education, have out comes that can be assessed in monetary terms, and
can be evaluated according to cost benefit analysis. However, most educational
alternatives are dedicated to improving achievement or some other educational out
comes that cannot be easily converted in to monetary terms. Many important
decisions in education are concerned with the costs of education. Cost analysis can
reveal the cost implications of any educational policy, assess the financial feasibility
of an educational reform, provide diagnosis of past and current resource utilization
in education (Carnoy,1995).
Human development is the expansion of people’s freedom to live long, healthy and
creative lives; to advance other goals they have reason to value; and to engage
actively in shaping development equitably and sustainable on measured planet.
People are both beneficiaries and the drivers of human development, as individuals
and in groups (UNDP,2010: P.2)
Human development is not only about health, education and income – it is also
about people’s active engagement in shaping development, equity and
sustainability, intrinsic aspects of the freedom people has to lead lives they have
reason to value.
Generally, an increase in the real GDP per capita of a nation (Beardshaw, 1984: p.
678).
Economic growth: refers to an increase in the volume of total real output produced
in an economy. This results from an increase is the source base of a country and/or
gain in production efficiency (Getachew, 1999: p. 40).
19. Educational benefits must start with two basic observations. The first is that
people with more education usually differ from those with less education. The
secondary observation is that individual changes as they obtain more schooling. For
all levels of education the discussion of educational benefits must begin by asking a
question, who will benefits? The first and the most obvious are the students (private
benefit).the second are the society (social benefits) who may or may not invest in
education of students either directly or indirectly. The third beneficiaries’
educations at each of its level institution who teach, administrate, and provide other
service. This is important because in many case decisions are made with in school
not for the benefit of students or society but for the benefits of those employed
there (Carnoy, 1995).
24. efficiency in educational production is
concerned with a comparison of the costs of
education to the output of education. Educational
production is said to be efficient when the
maximum amount of educational output is produced
for a given educational cost or alternatively the
least amount of educational cost is required to
achieve a given level of educational output.
1000
800
600
500
400
300 -----------------------------------------
2oo