Is Formal Lifelong Learning a Profitable Investment for All of Life? How Age, Education Level, and Flexibility of Provision Affect Rates of Return to Adult Education in Colombia

Lifelong learning is increasingly being recognized as a primary factor for knowledge diffusion and productivity growth. However, little economic evidence exists on the economic value of lifelong learning for the individual, especially in developing countries. This paper contributes to remedy this shortfall. It investigates one aspect of lifelong learning: returns to formal education across ages. In the absence of long-term longitudinal data, the paper estimates rates of return for simulated re-entry into the education system. The estimations use the method of internal rate of return and are based on observed education-age-earnings profiles from the Colombian national household survey. It finds that rates of return to all levels of education are only slightly smaller for 35 year olds than for young people, thus confirming the profitability of investment in adult education. Tertiary education continues to attract a positive return until late in life, 45-50 years, whereas the economic value of re-entering primary and secondary education is positive up till the age of 40-45. So, formal lifelong learning seems to remain a profitable investment for at least half of life. But lack of part-time work, high tuition fees, and prolonged study time reduce the return. The findings suggest that adult formal education initiatives should focus on the 20 to 40 year olds and be designed flexibly to allow learners to work part time.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sohnesen, Thomas Pave, Blom, Andreas
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2005-12
Subjects:ACCESS TO EDUCATION, ACCREDITATION, ADMINISTRATIVE DATA, ADULT EDUCATION, ADULT LEARNING, ADULT STUDENTS, AGE COHORT, AGE GROUP, AGE GROUPS, CAREER, CONTINUING EDUCATION, COST OF EDUCATION, COSTS OF EDUCATION, CREDIT TRANSFER, CURRICULA, CURRICULUM, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, ECONOMIC GAINS, EDUCATION INDICATORS, EDUCATION INITIATIVES, EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS, EDUCATION LEVEL, EDUCATION LEVELS, EDUCATION SYSTEM, EDUCATION ­ INVESTMENTS, EDUCATIONAL COSTS, EDUCATIONAL FACTORS, EDUCATIONAL LEVELS, EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES, ENROLLMENT, ENROLLMENT RATES, ENROLMENT RATE, FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS, FORMAL EDUCATION, FORMAL EDUCATION SYSTEM, FORMAL LEARNING, FURTHER EDUCATION, GLOBAL KNOWLEDGE, GROSS ENROLLMENT, HIGH COSTS, HIGH EARNERS, HIGHER EDUCATION, HIGHER ENROLLMENT, HIGHLY SKILLED LABOR, HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS, HUMAN CAPITAL, INCOME LEVELS, INVESTMENT IN EDUCATION, KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY, LABOR FORCE, LABOR MARKET, LABOR MARKETS, LATIN AMERICAN, LEARNING, LEARNING POLICIES, LEAVING SCHOOL, LEVEL OF EDUCATION, LEVELS OF EDUCATION, LIFELONG LEARNING, LITERATURE, LOCAL LABOR MARKET, NET ENROLLMENT, PAPERS, POOR PEOPLE, PRIMARY EDUCATION, PRIMARY ENROLLMENT, PRIVATE INSTITUTIONS, PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS, RATES OF RETURN, RETURN TO EDUCATION, RETURNS TO EDUCATION, RURAL POPULATION, SCHOOL SUPPLIES, SCHOOLING, SCHOOLS, SECONDARY EDUCATION, SECONDARY LEVEL, SKILLED WORKERS, STUDENT POPULATION, TEACHING, TERTIARY EDUCATION, TERTIARY ENROLLMENT, TERTIARY INSTITUTIONS, TERTIARY LEVEL, TERTIARY STUDENTS, TRAINING INSTITUTIONS, TUITION, TUITION COSTS, TUITION FEES, UNIVERSAL PRIMARY EDUCATION, UNIVERSITIES, URBAN AREAS, WORK EXPERIENCE, WORKERS, WORKING HOURS, YOUNG PEOPLE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/12/6479834/formal-lifelong-learning-profitable-investment-all-life-age-education-level-flexibility-provision-affect-rates-return-adult-education-colombia
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8558
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Summary:Lifelong learning is increasingly being recognized as a primary factor for knowledge diffusion and productivity growth. However, little economic evidence exists on the economic value of lifelong learning for the individual, especially in developing countries. This paper contributes to remedy this shortfall. It investigates one aspect of lifelong learning: returns to formal education across ages. In the absence of long-term longitudinal data, the paper estimates rates of return for simulated re-entry into the education system. The estimations use the method of internal rate of return and are based on observed education-age-earnings profiles from the Colombian national household survey. It finds that rates of return to all levels of education are only slightly smaller for 35 year olds than for young people, thus confirming the profitability of investment in adult education. Tertiary education continues to attract a positive return until late in life, 45-50 years, whereas the economic value of re-entering primary and secondary education is positive up till the age of 40-45. So, formal lifelong learning seems to remain a profitable investment for at least half of life. But lack of part-time work, high tuition fees, and prolonged study time reduce the return. The findings suggest that adult formal education initiatives should focus on the 20 to 40 year olds and be designed flexibly to allow learners to work part time.