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September 24, 2007

Education and Economic Competitiveness

Remarks
by
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors ofthe Federal Reserve System
before the
U.S. Chamber Education and Workforce Summit
Washington, D.C.
September 24, 2007

When I travel around the country, meeting with students, business people, and
others interested in the economy, I am occasionally asked for investment advice. Usually
(though not always) the question is posed in jest. No one really expects me to tell them
which three stocks they should buy. However, I know the answer to the question and I
will share it with you today: Education is the best investment.
Here at the U.S. Chamber Education and Workforce Summit, I don't really need
to convince you that, as an investment, education provides excellent returns, both for
individuals and for society. As executives accustomed to making hard cost-benefit
decisions, you doubtless assign a high priority to the quality of your business's workforce
because you know that a key--perhaps the key--to your success is the capabilities of the
people you employ. To a significant extent, those capabilities are the product of
education. Here I am speaking not just of education acquired formally in classrooms
before entering the workforce but also of lifelong learning that, yes, includes the formal
classroom training that might first come to mind but that also includes early childhood
programs, informal mentoring on the job, and mid-career retraining, to name a few
examples. And when I speak of capabilities, I mean not only the knowledge derived
from education but also the values, skills, and personal traits acquired through education,
which are as important as, and sometimes even more important than, the specific
knowledge obtained. These include such qualities as the ability to think critically, to
communicate clearly and logically, and to see a project through from start to finish.
Today, I would like to offer a broad overview of education and its importance to
our economy from my perspective not only as an economist but also as a one-time school
board member, the spouse of a teacher, and the parent of two young adults pursuing

-2higher education. Although the United States has long been a world leader in expanding
educational opportunities, we have also long grappled with challenges, such as troubling
high-school dropout rates, particularly for minority and immigrant youths, and
frustratingly slow and uneven progress in raising test scores and other measures of
educational achievement. Ifwe are to make progress in meeting these challenges, we
must be willing to actively debate their causes and continually experiment and innovate
to find solutions.
The Benefits of Education
Education imparts significant benefits both to our society and the individuals who
pursue it. Economists have long recognized that the skills of the workforce are an
important source of economic growth. Moreover, as the increase over time in the returns
to education and skill is likely the single greatest cause of the long-term rise in economic
inequality, policies that lead to broad investments in education and training can help
reduce inequality while expanding economic opportunity (Bemanke, 2007). But the
benefits of education are more than economic. A substantial body of evidence
demonstrates that more-highly-educated individuals are happier on average, make better
personal financial decisions, suffer fewer spells of unemployment, and enjoy better
health. Benefiting society as a whole, educated individuals are more likely to participate
in civic affairs, volunteer their time to charities, and subscribe to personal values--such as
tolerance and an appreciation of cultural differences--that are increasingly crucial for the
healthy functioning of our diverse society (Glaeser, Ponzetto, and Shleifer, 2006; Dee,
2004).

-3-

From a macroeconomic standpoint, education is important because it is so directly
linked to productivity, which, in tum, is the critical detenninant of the overall standard of
living. The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that, between 1987 and 2006, ongoing
improvement in the education and experience of the U.S. workforce contributed 0.4
percentage point per year to the increase in nonfann business labor productivity (U.S.
Department of Labor, 2007), a significant amount. These estimates are however
conservative in that they hold fixed other sources of productivity growth, such as the
accumulation of various fonns of capital and the advance of technology; but workers'
skills certainly contribute indirectly to productivity growth by affecting these other
factors as well. For example, the state of technology is affected both by the creativity and
knowledge of scientists and engineers engaged in formal research and development as
well as by the efforts of skilled workers on the shop floor who find more efficient ways to
accomplish a given task. Managers who develop a new business plan or find new ways
to use evolving technologies can also be thought of as adding to the "intangible," or
knowledge-based, capital of the firm, which by some estimates is comparable in
importance to physical capital such as factories and equipment (Corrado, Hulten, and
Sichel, 2006).
For individuals, the economic returns to education are substantial as well. In
2006, the median weekly earnings of college graduates were 75 percent higher than the

earnings of high-school graduates. In tum, workers with a high-school degree earned 42
percent more than those without any diploma. 1 These differentials are large and have
been growing; indeed, they have roughly doubled in the past twenty-five years or so. The
source of the widening wage gap between the more-educated and less-educated is nothing

- 4more complicated than supply and demand. The demand for more-educated workers has
been increasing rapidly, partly because the much more widespread use of computers and
other sophisticated information and communication technologies in the workplace has
increased the reward for technical skills. The supply of highly educated workers has also
risen. At the start ofthe 1980s, 22 percent of young adults aged 25 to 29 held a college
degree or more; by last year, that fraction had moved up to 28.5 percent? Nevertheless,
the supply of educated workers has not kept pace with demand, thus generating an
increased salary premium for education. Because the wages of those at the top of the
educational ladder have increased the fastest, increasing our investment in education can
benefit not only individuals and society but also might narrow income gaps.
Education and the Challenges Facing America Today
The educational challenges our society faces should be considered in the context
ofthree broad trends: the retirement of the baby-boom generation, the inexorable advance
ofthe technological frontier, and the ongoing globalization of economic activity.
As the baby boomers, now ranging in age from their late 40s to early 60s, leave
the workforce, their places will be taken by the smaller cohort of workers born in the
mid-to-Iate 1960s and early 1970s. As a result, the U.S. workforce--as a matter of simple
arithmetic--will increase more slowly and is likely to become less experienced on average
(Jorgenson and others, 2007; Aaronson and Sullivan, 2002). In a broader sense, the ratio
of working people to retirees will decline, meaning that those still working will, in effect,
be supporting relatively more non-working people. This year, there are about five
working-age people (20-64) for every person aged 65 and older; by 2030, the ratio will be
about 3-to-l (Bernanke, 2006). The slower expansion of the labor force, all else equal,

-5-

implies slower growth of potential output. More schooling for more of the workforce
could help cushion the impact of this demographic transition on economic growth by
boosting productivity growth.
Continuing advances in technology also put a premium on education. Which jobs
will be most affected by technology is difficult to predict, although some research
suggests that sectors that now use information technology (IT) relatively less intensively,
such as health-care and other service sectors, are likely to step up their use of software
and IT services (Mann, 2003). Regardless, better-educated workers are likely better
prepared to adapt to new technologies as they develop (Doms, Dunne, and Troske, 1997).
Ongoing globalization of economic activity will also lead to continuing changes
in the structure of the U.S. economy--including the composition of our output of both
goods and services, and thus the structure of our labor force. The world economy is
benefiting from the expansion oftrade and the rising productivity of countries abroad that
are making great strides expanding both their infrastructure and the educational
attainment of their workforces. That can be good for them, and for us. Importantly, our
ability to reap the benefits of globalization will depend on the flexibility of our labor
force to adapt to changes in job opportunities, in part by investing in the education and
training necessary to meet the new demands (Bemanke, 2004).
Educational Attainment and Achievement: Where Do We Stand?
The United States has a long tradition of recognizing the significant social and
economic benefits of providing high-quality education for as many of its citizens as
possible. The United States led the world, first, in expanding access to high-school
education and, then, in the post-World War II era, access to college (Goldin, 2001;

-6-

Goldin and Katz, 1999), By 1966, about half of the workforce aged 25 and older had
completed high school and about 10 percent had completed college. By 2006, more than
90 percent of adults in the labor force had a high-school education and more than 20
percent held at least a bachelor's degree. However, most of the progress over the past
forty years occurred in the 1970s and early 1980s. Since then, for example, the highschool graduation rate for 25-to-29-year-olds has not increased, and the college
completion rate has risen only modestly (U.S. Department of Education, 2007b).
One trend is particularly disappointing: Both high-school and college completion
rates for minorities continue to lag. 3 Over the past ten years, the high-school completion
rate for whites aged 25 to 29 hovered above 93 percent, while the rate for blacks ofthe
same age stayed near 87 percent; the rate for Hispanics, though trending up over the
period, was only 63 percent last year. The gaps in college completion are wider. In
recent years, more than one-third of whites aged 25 to 29 had at least a bachelor's degree,
compared with less than one-fifth of same-aged blacks and around 10 percent of
Hispanics.
Assessing where we stand in terms of educational achievement (how much
students learn) is fraught with considerably greater difficulties than assessing attainment
(how far students progress in their schooling). And, the results of various metrics
highlight both discouraging and encouraging elements. The Department of Education's
National Assessment of Educational Progress shows the average reading levels of our
high-school seniors have stagnated in recent years; however, our fourth graders continue
to improve in reading, and both fourth and eighth graders have improved in math (U.S.
Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, 2007b). At the same

-7time, some initial results from the adoption of state accountability standards suggest that
they have had a positive effect on students' test-score gains (Jacob, 2005; Hanushek and
Raymond, 2004). International comparisons of student achievement are even more
4

difficult and present a mixed picture. Compared with students around the world, U.S.
students still perform relatively well in reading and, in the lower grades, at math and
science. Older U.S. students, however, show less ability to apply math and science skills
than their peers in other industrialized countries.

Lifelong Learning Can Help Us Meet Economic Challenges
In the past, the U.S. education system has responded to the needs of a changing
economy, and I believe that as we address such challenges as the retirement of the babyboom generation, advancing technology, and globalization, our education system will
again make an important contribution to the adjustment process. That means, of course,
that we will have to grapple with difficult issues--how to boost educational attainment,
particularly for minorities and immigrant youths; how to make more consistent and
noticeable progress in raising academic achievement; and how to ensure that older
workers have meaningful opportunities to refresh their skills.
What can be done so that our educational system will continue to playa
significant role in supporting economic change? In broad terms, we must begin by
recognizing that learning is a lifelong process and that we have opportunities to improve
education at every point along the way. Many of these opportunities lie outside the
traditional route of a kindergarten-through-twelfth-grade education followed by four
years of college. I'd like to comment briefly on what economists have found about the
benefits of educational investments at different points in the life cycle.

-8Early Childhood Education

Building the foundation for lifelong learning from the earliest ages is crucial
(Heckman, Stixrud, and Urzua, 2006). Research suggests that the home environment is
especially important and that children who start behind find catching up increasingly
difficult (Heckman and Masterov, 2007). Thus, the payoff from high-quality pre-school
and home visitation programs is likely very high, especially for children born into poor or
otherwise disadvantaged families. Recent research--some sponsored by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Minneapolis in collaboration with the University of Minnesota--has
documented high returns from early childhood programs in terms of subsequent
educational attainment and in lower rates of social problems, such as crime, teenage
pregnancy, and welfare dependency (Burr and Grunewald, 2006).5 But early childhood
education is only the beginning. Positive results from programs such as Head Start
dissipate without further high-quality schooling at the elementary and secondary levels
(Garces, Thomas, and Currie, 2002).
Elementary and Secondary Schooling

Deciding what and how to teach students from kindergarten through high school
and then evaluating our schools' effectiveness in preparing students for the workforce
and a lifetime of learning is a daunting task. I will make only a few observations on the
goals we should keep in mind as we explore ways to improve learning at the elementary
and secondary levels.
First, we should encourage experimentation and innovation. By my reading, the
research on K-12 education has, to date, yielded no easy answers to the questions of how
to raise academic achievement and how to ensure that students finish high school well

-9-

prepared to move on to more advanced study. A wide range of approaches has been and
is being explored: smaller class size, school choice, charter school programs,
accountability standards, flexibility in teacher certification rules, better teacher pay,
merit-based pay, year-round schooling--the list is long and probably will get longer. The
size and diversity of our country, together with the fact that state and local policymakers
retain significant discretion over how to structure their educational systems, provides us a
natural laboratory for assessing the effectiveness of alternative educational strategies. I
view the debate about what works and what doesn't to be a crucial part of discovering
cost-effective ways to improve our educational system.
The business community has an obvious interest in how well our schools prepare
students for a future in the workforce and should actively participate in the debate. But
we all have a stake. Students at the elementary and secondary levels are being prepared
not just for work but for life. Such skills and acquired traits as critical and creative
thinking, social ability, persistence, and satisfaction in accomplishment make not only
good employees but good citizens as well. Exposure to the arts and culture and
experience in serving the community can help support the development ofthese broader,
harder-to-measure skills, alongside more readily measurable cognitive accomplishments
in reading, math, and science.
Second, teacher quality is critical. Studies show that student perfonnance
depends on putting high-quality teachers in the classroom and retaining them as long as
possible (Aaronson, Barrow, and Sander, 2007; Rivkin, Hanushek, and Kain, 2005;
Rockoff, 2004). Indeed, many initiatives focus on linking students, especially
disadvantaged students, with high-quality schools staffed by high-quality teachers. High-

- 10 quality teachers instill in their young students a desire to stay in school and seek more
education later in life, and the evidence suggests that the quality of teaching might have
the biggest impact on lower-ability students (Murnane and Steele, 2007; Clotfelter and
others, 2006; Hanushek, Kain, and Rivkin, 2004). Unfortunately, our most
disadvantaged communities, the ones most troubled by high dropout rates, have difficulty
attracting and keeping qualified teachers.
We must instill a desire among students to stay in school and to seek more
education and training over their working lives. Our elementary and secondary schools
must provide students a strong foundation for a life of learning. Although a wide range
of remedial education programs exist, research suggests that they are more costly and less
effective than a solid, sustained course of study through high school. In partiCUlar,
government training programs for disadvantaged youth have a rather disappointing
reputation, particularly those that are less intensive and not well tied to labor market
needs (Martin and Grubb, 2001; Heckman, LaLonde, and Smith, 1999).
A number of possibilities for improving the education of disadvantaged students
seem worth exploring. For example, several experiments suggest that smaller schools
and smaller classes may help disadvantaged students (although the benefits of such
programs for the general student popUlation remain controversial). Supplemental
education, including after-school and mentoring programs such as Big Brothers Big
Sisters, have been shown to boost school attendance (Grossman and Tierney, 1998).
Increasing school time--either through longer school hours or summer school--also has
found some support (Jacob and Lefgren, 2004).

- 11 -

Higher Education

In many ways, higher education represents the strongest part ofthe U.S.
educational system, as demonstrated by the fact that students from all parts ofthe world
come here to study. Our institutions of higher learning are extraordinarily varied, ranging
from large public research universities to small liberal arts colleges to community
colleges and vocational schools.
The main business of our institutions of higher education is, of course,
undergraduate teaching. But unlike some countries, we do not separate research and
undergraduate education; our advanced, graduate-level research programs are housed in
universities with strong undergraduate programs. Thus, our colleges and universities are
important sources of research and development (National Science Foundation, 2007;
Litan, Mitchell, and Reedy, forthcoming). More than half our basic research--the
foundation for breakthroughs that create new industries--is conducted at universities.
Additionally, higher education has embraced the broader mission of translating research
into new products and enterprises; our colleges and universities account for 15 percent of
applied research and development (National Science Foundation, 2007). The innovations
that begin on campuses are diffused to businesses through patents, start-up companies,
and consulting arrangements between faculty and industry.
One great challenge in higher education lies in making sure our high-school
graduates are prepared for it and have access to it. With college enrollment rates having
leveled off in recent years, much debate surrounds how we can move more students into
higher education and keep them in school until they graduate. Researchers have
demonstrated a strong relationship between family income and college attendance. Since

- 12 1990, nearly 80 percent of high-school completers from high-income families (the top 20
percent of income) have enrolled in college the next fall. The proportion ofthose from
low-income families who enroll in college the following fall has been moving up
gradually, but it remains much lower--just over 50 percent. 6 This discrepancy holds even
for students classified as high achievers: A longitudinal study of eighth graders in 1988
found that only 29 percent ofthose scoring in the top fourth of the group in math--but
who were from families with low social and economic status--had completed a bachelor's
degree or more by 2000, while three-fourths of those from families with high social and
economic status finished their undergraduate degrees (Fox, Connelly, and Snyder, 2005).7
Surely, high tuition must be one barrier to attending and completing college (Card, 2001;
Kane, 1994), but it is not the only barrier (Dynarski, 2005). Low-income students, in
particular, are more likely to come from school and family environments that do a poor
job of preparing them for a successful transition to college (Carneiro and Heckman,
2003). This suggests that supplemental programs to help under-prepared college students
could improve eventual college completion rates; unfortunately, the research on the
benefits of such programs is mixed, which reinforces the need to improve educational
achievement in regular high school classes (Bettinger and Long, 2005; Angrist, Lang, and
Oreopoulos, 2006).
Community colleges have made a significant contribution to expanding
educational opportunities. Offering lower costs and more-flexible schedules, they now
enroll almost one-half of U.S. undergraduates. Attendance at one ofthese institutions is
associated with higher wages, even if a degree is not completed. Evidence suggests that
each year of credit at a community college is worth almost as much, in terms of increased

- 13 -

earnings potential, as a year at a four-year college. The average student who entered, but
did not complete, community college earns 9 percent to 13 percent more than the average
for students who ended their education with high school. Those who completed a twoyear associate degree earn an even larger premium, 15 percent to 27 percent (Kane and
Rouse, 1999). And the earnings of graduates who started at two-year schools and
transferred to four-year programs ultimately match those who begin their post-highschool education at four-year institutions (Gill and Leigh, 2003). Community colleges
playa constructive role not only for 18-to-22-year-olds but also for older adults,
providing flexible programs for obtaining new skills, specialized training contracted for
by individual businesses, remedial education, and adult enriclunent.
Adult Education

Today we are increasingly recognizing that education need not, indeed should not,
stop at the age of 22. Economists have long argued that on-the-job training and learningby-doing are significant components of the acquisition of human capital. Research shows
that the knowledge and experience gained over time through informal and formal
learning on the job appear to pay off for workers and accrues particularly rapidly early in
their careers (Altonji and Williams, 2005; Topel, 1991). An extensive survey of firmsponsored training a number of years ago found that 84 percent of employees received
some kind of formal training while working for their current employer, and 96 percent
received some type of informal training (Bureau of Labor Statistics, 1996). With the
advance of technology and the need to attract and retain skilled workers, I am certain that
business-sponsored training will remain an important component of the management
toolkit.

- 14 Upgrading skills through continuing education and training outside the job is also
important, particularly in an environment in which workers can face displacement from
international competition or technological advance. Recognizing this possibility, many
workers continue to acquire fonnal education later in life than was once traditional. For
example, almost one-fifth of students at post-secondary institutions of all types are at
least 35 years old (National Center for Education Statistics, 2007a). And, for older
workers looking to retool their skills, classroom instruction has been shown to be
effective. For example, classroom training for displaced workers is estimated to boost
future wages as much as for students of the usual school age, although the overall return
on investment for displaced workers is lower because they have fewer remaining working
years than do new entrants to the labor force (Jacobsen, LaLonde, Sullivan, 2005).
Similarly, studies of a number of welfare-to-work programs have reported long-tenn
gains for those who participated in intensive basic education and vocational training
(Dyke and others, 2006; Hotz, Imbens, Klennan, 2006). Such results suggest that welldesigned programs to assist workers who lose their jobs can contribute to cushioning the
effects of globalization and technological change.

Conclusion
Let me close by reiterating that education--lifelong education for everyone, from
toddlers to workers well advanced in their careers--is indeed an excellent investment for
individuals and society as a whole. Education fundamentally supports advances in
productivity, upon which our ability to generate continuing improvement in our standard
ofliving depends. Ifwe are to successfully navigate such challenges as the retirement of
the baby-boom generation, advancing technology, and increasing globalization, we must

- 15 work diligently to maintain the quality of our educational system where it is strong and
strive to improve it where it is not. In particular, we must find ways to move more of our
students, especially minorities and students from disadvantaged backgrounds, into
educational opportunities after high school. To do that, we must continually experiment,
innovate, and evaluate so that we can make rational decisions about what works and what
doesn't in education. Because the quality of your workforces is so vital to the success of
your businesses, you as business executives must participate fully in this process, along
with other stakeholders--students, parents, teachers, and policymakers. I'm encouraged
that you are devoting so much energy and thought to this topic at this three-day
conference.

- 16 -

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- 21 -

•
End Notes

The data are weekly earnings of full-time wage and salary workers aged twenty-five and older and are
derived from the Current Population Survey, published by the u.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
I

2The data are derived from the Current Population Survey, published by the u.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
3The data are derived from the Current Population Survey, March and Annual Social and Economic
Supplement, 1971-2006, published by the U.S. Department of Commerce.
The results of two prominent international assessments--The Trends in International Mathematics and
Science Study, conducted under the aegis of the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational
Achievement, and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's Program for
International Student Assessment--are summarized in the 2006 Digest of Education Statistics published by
the U.S. Department of Education (2007a). http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d06/ch_6.asp
4

More information on the Early Childhood Research Collaborative and copies of its research papers can be
obtained from the website of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, www.earlychildhoodrc.org.
5

6 These data are derived from the annual October Supplement to the Current Population Survey. They are
summarized in the u.S. Department of Education's Condition ofEducation 2007 available at
http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/2007 /section3/indicator 25.asp#info.

Socioeconomic status was measured by a composite score on parental education and occupations and
family income. The study also found that the proportion of low-scoring math students from high
socioeconomic families who completed at least a bachelor's degree was 30 percent versus only 3 percent
for those from lower socioeconomic families. For those in the middle quintiles of both scores and family
characteristics, the proportion was 21 percent.
7