Human Capital, Higher Education Enrolment and Economic Growth in the SSA Countries (Panel Model Approach)

  • Akinola G. W. College of Law and Management Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal
  • Bokana K. G. College of Law and Management Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal
Keywords: Economic growth, Sub Sahara Africa, Human Capital, Higher Education Enrolment

Abstract

This study offers exploratory analysis on the relationship among human capital, higher education enrolment and economic growth in SSA countries. With data from twenty-two African countries across the four economic blocs, five variables which include human capital formation, capital stock, employment rate, total factor productivity and higher education enrolment were regressed against gross domestic product per capital. Panel analysis which includes fixed and random effects analyses were carried out. We report results from fixed effect (within) regression as Hausman test suggests. It was discovered that SADC countries perform better among the four economic blocs. To further study individual country specific effects, we employ least square dummy variables (LSDV). Sixteen countries out of twenty-two exhibit specific effects. Our findings revealed that enrolment rate of higher education in SSA have a very weak relationship with economic growth in the SSA countries. This reflects why there is a weak relationship between economic growth and the total factor productivity and consequently negative consequential effects on our total factor productivity. The main policy implication is that for SSA countries to maintain sustainable economic growth, home based human capital must be given a priority in the form of increased higher education budget and financing. 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Adawo, M. A. (2011). Has education (human capital) contributed to economic growth of Nigeria. Journal of economic and international finance, 3(1), 46-58 Aghion, P., Howitt, P., Brant-Collett, M. & García-Peñalosa, C. (1998). Endogenous growth theory: MIT press. Amir, M., Muhamood, B. & Shahid, M. (2012). Impact of human capital on economic growth with emphasis on intermediary role of technology: Time series evidence from Pakistan. African journal of Business Management, 6(1), 280-285. Anyanwu, J. C. & Erhijakpor, A. E. O. (2007). Education Expenditures and School Enrolment in Africa: Illustrations from Nigeria and Other SANE Countries: African development bank, 1-11. Barro, R. J. (1996a), Determinants of Economic Growth: A Cross-Country Empirical Study, NBER Working Paper No. 5968 (Cambridge, Massachusetts: National Bureau of Economic Research). Barro, R. J. (2001). Human capital and growth. The American Economic Review, 91(2), 12-17. Barro, R. J. & Lee, J. W. (1993). International comparisons of educational attainment. Journal of monetary economics, 32(3), 363-394. Belgrave, A. & Craigwell, R. (1995). The Impact of government expenditure on economic growth in Barbados: A Disaggregated Approach. DeLisle Worrell and Roland Craigwell, 138. Bergh, A. & Fink, G. (2008). Higher Education Policy, Enrollment, and Income Inequality. Social Science Quarterly, 89(1). Bloom, D. E., Canning, D., Chan, K. & Luca, D. L. (2014). Higher education and economic growth in Africa. Higher Education and Economic Growth in Africa (December 18, 2014). International Journal of African Higher Education, 1(1). Bloom, D. E., Canning, D. & Chan, K. (2006). Higher education and economic development in Africa (Vol. 102): World Bank Washington, DC. Chaudhary, A. R., Iqbal, A. & Gillani, S. Y. M. (2009). The nexus between higher education and economic growth: An empirical investigation for Pakistan. Pakistan Journal of Commerce and Social Sciences, 3(1), 1-9. Chowdry, H., Crawford, C., Dearden, L., Goodman, A. & Vignoles, A. (2008). Understanding the determinants of participation in higher education and the quality of institute attended: analysis using administrative data. Institute for Fiscal Studies, mimeo. Clarke, P., Crawford, C., Steele, F. & Vignoles, A. F. (2010). The choice between fixed and random effects models: some considerations for educational research. https://ideas.repec.org/p/iza/izadps/dp5287.html Corazzini, A., Dugan, J., Dennis, J. & Grabowski, H. G. (1972). Determinants and distributional aspects of enrollment in US higher education. Journal of Human Resources, 2, 39-59. Fleischhauer, K. J. (2007). A Review of Human Capital Theory: Microeconomics, University of St. Gallen, Institute of Public Finance and Fiscal Law (IFF-HSG) Varnbüel strasse 19. Website http://www.iff.unisg.ch. Fitzsimons, P. (1999). Human capital theory and education. Encyclopedia of Philosophy of Education Online. Gemmell, N. (1996). Evaluating the impacts of human capital stocks and accumulation on economic growth: some new evidence. Oxford Bulletin of Economics and statistics, 58(1), 9-28. Glewwe, P., Maiga, E. & Zheng, H. (2007). The contribution of education to economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa: A review of the evidence. Department of Applied Economics, University of Minnesota, 358, 559579. Hanushek, E. A. & Kimko, D. D. (2000). Schooling, labor-force quality, and the growth of nations. American economic review, 5, 1184-1208. Hassan, S. & Ahmed, H. (2008). Education’s contribution to the economic growth of Sub-Saharan Africa. Southwestern Economic Review, 1(32), 175-190. Holland, D., Liadze, I., Rienzo, C. & Wilkinson, D. (2013). The relationship between graduates and economic growth across countries. BIS Research Paper, 110.
Lucas, R. E. (1988). On the mechanics of economic development. Journal of monetary economics, 22(1), 3-42. Mankiw, N. G., Romer, D. & Weil, D. N. (1992). A contribution to the empirics of economic growth. The quarterly journal of economics, 107(2), 407-437. Matsushita, S., Siddique, A. & Giles, M. (2006). Education and economic growth: a case study of Australia: University of Western Australia, Economics. McMahon, W. W. (2009). Higher learning, greater good: The private and social benefits of higher education: JHU Press. Nnanna, O. J., Alade, S. O. & Odoko, F. O. (2003). Contemporary economic policy issues in Nigeria: Central Bank of Nigeria. Nurudeen, A. & Usman, A. (2010). Government expenditure and economic growth in Nigeria, 1970-2008: A disaggregated analysis. Business and Economics Journal. Okebukola, P. C. (2008). Education reform: Imperatives for achieving vision 20-2020. Paper Presented at the National Summit on Education, Organized by Senate Committee on Education, held at Sheraton Hotel. Abuja, December 10-11 Olawumi, O. S., Ogungbenle, S. & Obasuyi, F. O. T. (2013). Life Expectancy, Public Health Spending and Economic Growth in Nigeria: A Vector Autoregressive (Var) Model. European Scientific Journal, 9, 1857 – 7881 (Print) e - ISSN 1857- 7431. McMahon, W. W. (2009). Higher learning, greater good: The private and social benefits of higher education. JHU Press. Romer, P. M. (1986). Increasing returns and long-run growth. Journal of political economy, 94(5), 1002-1037. Shaihani, M., Harisb, A., Ismaila, N. & Saida, R. (2011). Long run and short run effects on education levels: Case in Malaysia. International Journal of Economic Research, 2(6), 77-87. Sojkin, B., Bartkowiak, P. & Skuza, A. (2012). Determinants of higher education choices and student satisfaction: the case of Poland. HigherEducation, 63(5). Tilak, J. B. G. (2005). Are we marching towards Laissez-faireism in higher education development? Journal of international cooperation in education, 8(1). Tilak, J. B. G. (2011). Financing higher education in sub-saharan Africa. Africanus, 41(2), 4-31. Verbic, M., Majcen, B. & Cok, M. (2009). Education and Economic Growth in Slovenia: A Dynamic General Equilibrium Approach with Endogenous Growth. World Bank. (2008). Acceleration Catch-up: Tertiary Education for Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa. World Bank, Washington D.C. Zivengwa, T. (2006). Investigating the causal relationship between education and economic growth in Zimbabwe. Selim, 8.
Published
2018-01-15
How to Cite
W., A. G., & G., B. K. (2018). Human Capital, Higher Education Enrolment and Economic Growth in the SSA Countries (Panel Model Approach). Journal of Economics and Behavioral Studies, 9(6(J), 215-226. https://doi.org/10.22610/jebs.v9i6(J).2018
Section
Research Paper