| Literature DB >> 31001732 |
Bilal Barakat1, Robin Shields2.
Abstract
The expansion of higher education enrollment and attainment is a key uncertainty in the education profile of future populations. Many studies have examined cross-national determinants of higher education expansion as well the understanding of expansion through the relationship between higher education and the labor market. Early work established a typology for levels of enrollment, but recent empirical studies on the global growth of higher education attainment are scarce, and available projections resort to imposing ad hoc limits on future expansion. This study addresses this gap by comparing the trajectories of higher education expansion with those experienced at other levels on their course to universal or near-universal access. We demonstrate that a population-level model of expansion toward universal access fits higher education as well as lower levels of education (i.e., primary and secondary education). In other words, that there is no prima facie evidence of a ceiling in higher education enrollment that would indicate saturation significantly below 100 % participation. Claims that are premised on such a ceiling should therefore consider empirical evidence for this assumption in their analysis. These findings contribute to discussions on higher education expansion as well as studies of higher education and the labor market.Entities:
Keywords: Economic sociology; Educational attainment; Educational expansion; Higher education
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31001732 PMCID: PMC6592959 DOI: 10.1007/s13524-019-00775-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Demography ISSN: 0070-3370
Fig. 1Distribution of maximum proportion with postsecondary attainment in any five-year cohort, by gender, in reference years 2010–2015. The top five countries are labeled.
Fig. 2Illustrative stylized expansion trajectories with a shared functional form but distinct expansion rate parameters. Dots represent female lower secondary attainment in the Republic of Korea.
Fig. 3Residuals by education level and stage of expansion. Smoothed quantiles shown: median (solid line), 0.25 and 0.75 (dashed), and 0.025 and 0.975 (dotted). Quantiles above 65 % participation for higher education are omitted because of the small number of observations.
Fig. 4Residuals by education level and period. Smoothed means by gender are shown. Year corresponds to the cohort aged 30–34 at the time.
Fig. 5Distribution of country- and gender-specific expansion rate parameters by level. Mean (dot) and +/– 2 standard deviations (bar) are shown.
Cross-level correlations between expansion rates (upper triangle) and between residuals (lower triangle)
| Higher | Upper Secondary | Lower Secondary | Primary | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Higher | –– | .68 | .57 | .39 |
| Upper Secondary | .33 | –– | .64 | .42 |
| Lower Secondary | .24 | .46 | –– | .60 |
| Primary | .22 | .32 | .36 | –– |