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Kate Andrews Kate Andrews

ASI "Incentive to Invest?" report featured in The Daily Telegraph

The Adam Smith Institute's latest report - which finds education quality has a direct impact on long-term economic growth - was featured in The Daily Telegraph.

Britons would each be nearly £6,000 better off if more children went to independent schools, a Right-leaning think tank has said.

They offer the best value for the Government to improve exam results and pupils’ potential earnings, the Adam Smith Institute said.

Read the article here.

The report, “Incentive to Invest: How education affects economic growth”, reveals that Britain could add billions of pounds to its long-term economic growth by increasing access to private education. 

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Kate Andrews Kate Andrews

Author of "Incentive to Invest?" report writes for Conservative Home

Gabriel Heller Sahlgren wrote a comment piece for Conservative Home detailing the links between education quality and long-term economic growth. 

But there’s education and there’s education. Shuffling more people into upper-secondary school and higher education offers a simple solution to the problem. With more schooling years, the story goes, people will acquire the skills necessary to create a competitive economy. Indeed, this idea was partly behind the 2008 Education and Skills Act, which increased the compulsory schooling age to 18.

But simple solutions are rarely good solutions, and this certainly applies here. My paper, published today by the Adam Smith Institute, reviews the existing empirical research and provides new statistical evidence on the impact of education quantity and quality on growth. And, in fact, support for the idea that schooling years per se raise growth is thin, at least in developed economies.

Read the full article here.

The report, “Incentive to Invest: How education affects economic growth”, reveals that Britain could add billions of pounds to its long-term economic growth by increasing access to private education. 

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Kate Andrews Kate Andrews

Press Release: More private education would add billions of pounds to long-term economic growth

Contact Communications Manager, Kate Andrews, for further comments or to arrange an interview: kate@adamsmith.org / 07584 778207

  • The UK’s average annual growth rate between 1960 and 2007 would have been almost 1 percentage point higher had it matched the Netherlands' long-term level of independent school enrolment since 1960. This in turn means that UK GDP per capita would have been over £5,800 higher in 2007 than it was.
  • Better education boosts economic growth; improving students’ international test scores by 10% raises a country's average annual growth rate by 0.85 percentage points.
  • UK GDP per capita would have been almost £5,300 higher in 2007 had it performed as well as Taiwan since the mid-twentieth century.

Britain could add billions of pounds to long-term economic growth if it increased access to private education, a new report released today (Tuesday July 29th) by the free-market Adam Smith Institute has found.

The report, “Incentive to Invest: How education affects economic growth”, illustrates how higher educational achievement boosts long-term economic growth, and the important role of private schooling in this process.

Through the use of existing research and new quantitative evidence, the author of the report, Gabriel Heller Sahlgren, establishes that test scores are closely related to growth. Lifting achievement by 10% hikes a country’s average annual growth by 0.85 percentage points.

Furthermore, the report illustrates how competition from independent schools has proven successful in generating higher international test scores, while also driving costs down. Sending 20 percentage points more 15 year olds to independent schools would raise growth by 0.4pp—or about a sixth—via its positive effect on educational achievement.

Based on his findings, Heller Sahlgren calls for the government to radically reform education policy by encouraging more privatisation and competition in the education sector.

Had the UK matched the Netherlands’ long-term level of independent school enrolment since 1960, its GDP per capita would be over £5,800 higher today, the report argues. At a time when policymakers are trying to cement and broaden the economic recovery, the report suggests that expansion of access to private schooling would be an attractive component of a long-term growth strategy.

Commenting on the report, its author Gabriel Heller Sahlgren said:

“My research shows that a focus on increasing the number of pupils taking higher qualifications is misguided. There’s in fact no robust impact of average schooling years in the population on economic growth on average.

“On the other hand, education quality, proxied by international test scores, has a consistent and strong effect on growth. According to my calculations, the UK’s real GDP per capita in 2007 would have been over £5,000 higher had we performed on par with Taiwan since the mid-20th century. So the dividend of improving children’s attainment is large indeed.

“Yet there are different ways to do achieve this. Unlike expensive resource-driven education reforms, which are rarely cost effective, a good option is to raise the level of independent school competition, which other research shows both increases international test scores as well as decreases costs.

“According to my calculations, the indirect economic benefit, via higher achievement, of increasing the number of pupils in independent schools to the Netherlands’ level would be a 0.92 percentage point higher long run GDP per capita growth rate. The government should therefore continue their market-based reforms on education and expand choice as widely as possible."

Sam Bowman, Research Director of the Institute, said:

This report shows that we need greater access to private schooling for all pupils regardless of background, not just to improve the welfare of the children themselves but to boost the UK’s overall standard of living and long-term economic growth.

Expanded access to private education through school vouchers and a revival of the assisted places scheme may be an easy, low cost way for the government to boost growth by improving the human capital of British workers. The results may take some time to materialize but studies like this show just how valuable a long-term strategy for expanding access to private schools could be.

Click here to read “Incentive to Invest: How education affects economic growth”.

For further comments or to arrange an interview, contact Kate Andrews, Communications Manager, at kate@adamsmith.org / 07584 778207.

The Adam Smith Institute is an independent libertarian think tank based in London. It advocates classically liberal public policies to create a richer, freer world.

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Kate Andrews Kate Andrews

Director of The Entrepreneur's Network writes for City AM

Director of The Entrepreneur's Network, Philip Salter, wrote a comment piece for City AM highlighting some good news: the UK has just been ranked second in the latest Global Innovation Index. Read the article here.

Apart from the risk of shocks from geopolitical crises, the outlook for the economy looks a whole lot brighter than it has for a long time. Friday’s UK GDP figures are the latest in a steady stream of good news, but this doesn’t need to be the only thing to brighten your Monday morning: the UK has also just been ranked second in the latest Global Innovation Index (GII), part of a comprehensive report created by Cornell University, Insead, and the World Intellectual Property Office.

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Kate Andrews Kate Andrews

The Financial Times pays tribute to John Blundell

The Financial Times quoted the ASI's Dr Madsen Pirie in their tribute to John Blundell, former Director of the Institute of Economic Affairs and lifelong friend of the Adam Smith Institute. Read the article here.

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Kate Andrews Kate Andrews

Sam Bowman's Green Belt proposals are featured in The Guardian

The ASI's Research Director's proposal to roll back the Green Belt in London to solve the housing crisis was featured in The Guardian article: "Let's at least talk about building on London's greenbelt." Read the article here.

The right leaves it to its think tanks to make the case for setting market forces free. That's what Sam Bowman of the Adam Smith Institute has done in a short film for BBC London. He accepts that some types of greenbelt land should continue to be protected, especially sylvan treasures the public can enjoy. But he argues that parts presently used for intensive farming should be considered for re-classification, liberating farmers to sell their fields to developers and letting laissez-faire do the rest.

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Kate Andrews Kate Andrews

ASI Senior Fellow debates corporation tax in the New York Times

The Adam Smith Institute's Senior Fellow, Tim Worstall, was featured in the 'Room for Debate' section of the New York Times, arguing that corporate taxation is inefficient. Read the article here.

Tax inversions do not change the taxation of profits made inside America one whit, not by one red cent. Under law, AbbVie, Walgreens, or any other company would still pay exactly the same amount of U.S. taxes on their profits made in the U.S. after an inversion as they were before. That part of the debate is simply a red herring.

The broader problem is the corporate income tax.

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