Page 7 - Japanese Growth and Education: 演講人:Motohisa Kaneko教授
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Japan’s Development and Education - Past, Present and Future -c107





                   based on agriculture. Even though it is estimated that literacy rates were already

                   as high as seventy-percent among boys, the majority of children received
                   virtually no schooling. It is also important to recognize that the immediate
                   pecuniary return to education should have been minimal, or even negative,

                   considering that child labor was valuable in an agrarian economy. Moreover,
                   the Meiji government at this point had a very small tax base allowing for only
                   a small expenditure on primary schools. The burden of building and running

                   primary schools was mainly put on the shoulders of local communities.
                       Nonetheless, the ideal of primary education was accepted by the Japanese
                   to overcome the obstacles. Figure 1 above shows that gross enrollment rate in
                   4-year primary schools increased from the 30 percent level in the 1970s to 80

                                                   th
                   percent by the beginning of the 20  century, and then to almost 100 percent
                                                th
                   level in the first decade of the 20  century. A gross enrollment is derived as the
                   ratio of enrolled students to the number of total school-age students. A gross
                   enrollment rate of 100 does not necessarily imply that all the children completed
                   primary education, it only stands for the ratio of enrolled students to those at
                   appropriate age bracket. In fact there was a significant amount of “wastage” of

                   students, who dropped out before graduation (Amano, 1997).

                   Phase 2


                       Japan’s education went into the new stage, which spanned from the

                   period of World War I until the period of World War II. This is the period when
                   universalization of primary education was achieved, while secondary, and then
                   higher education started initial stage of expansion. From the perspective of

                   economic development, this is the period when the modern sector of economy
                   took off. That included the manufacturing sector equipped with Western
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