MEASURING RETURNS ON INVESTMENT IN
EDUCATION: LESSONS FOR SUSTAINABLE
AND INNOVATIVE EDUCATION POLICY
Hatidza Jahic and
Amila Pilav-Velic University of Sarajevo, School of Economics and Business Received: 27thJuly 2020. ABSTRACT The relationship between education and labor market is significant and complex. Education increases employment opportunities and reduces the chance of occurrence and duration of unemployment. Earnings, among other things, represent private returns on investment in education and are in the center of the analysis of this article. The main aim of this article is to estimate private and social returns on investment in primary, secondary and tertiary education in selected old and new member states of the European Union (EU) by using two methods (Earnings function and Short-cut method) based on the Mincer equation. Results have shown that there is no statistically significant difference between the estimated private and social returns on investment in primary, secondary and tertiary education in groups of old and new EU members. New members converge towards the old members, at least when it comes to returns on investment in these three education levels. The results also indicate the existence of low and negative returns on investment in education in both old and new EU members. Thus, this article with its new findings contributes significantly to the literature that studies the universality of conclusions on returns on investment in education and the methodology that is used. KEY WORDS CLASSIFICATION
Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
INDECS 19(2), 189-209, 2021
DOI 10.7906/indecs.19.2.2
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Accepted: 5thMarch 2021.
Review article
education, education policy, investment, return, Mincer equation, European Union
JEL: I20, I26, I28