Students walking in a place of education

Education and skills

Our work on Education and Skills aims to understand what matters for the healthy development of children, from infancy to young adulthood. It tracks education spending in various stages of education and assesses the effectiveness of government policies at improving children’s outcomes and inequalities therein.

Focus on

Go

Showing 241 – 260 of 946 results

Working paper graphic

Preschool quality and child development

Working Paper

Global access to preschool has increased dramatically yet preschool quality is often poor. We use a randomized controlled trial to evaluate two approaches to improving the quality of Colombian preschools.

23 September 2019

Student raises hand

2019 annual report on education spending in England

Report

Education spending is the second-largest element of public service spending in the UK behind health, representing about £91 billion in 2018–19 in today’s prices or about 4.2% of national income.

19 September 2019

Book graphic

2019 annual report on education spending in England: schools

Book Chapter
School spending covers pupils in state-funded schools aged 5–16, as well as pupils aged 16–18 in school sixth forms. In 2018–19, total school spending in England – excluding early years and sixth-form funding – stood at about £44 billion in 2019–20 prices.

30 August 2019

Journal graphic

Student loans in Japan: Current problems and possible solutions

Journal article

The Japanese higher education sector has seen increases in tuition with stagnant household incomes in a society where family support for university students has been the norm. Student loans from the government have grown rapidly to sustain the gradual increase in university enrolments. These time-based repayment loans (TBRLs) have created financial hardship for increasing numbers of loan recipients and their families. There is some evidence that prospective students from low-income households are forgoing a university education to avoid student loan debt. The Japanese government has introduced some measures including grants and a partial income-contingent loan (ICL) scheme to help alleviate these problems.

29 August 2019

Journal graphic

Modelling alternative student loan schemes for Brazil

Journal article

This paper simulates student loan schemes for Brazil. A copula approach is applied to simulate dynamic earnings paths for graduates. Repayment patterns are then simulated for time-based and income-contingent loan designs.

22 August 2019

Journal graphic

Evaluating and designing student loan systems: an overview of empirical approaches

Journal article

To understand and design student loan systems, realistic earnings and/or income projections for current and future graduates are crucial. In this paper, Current Population Survey (CPS) data from the US is used to demonstrate empirical approaches that can be exploited to simulate lifetime income and earnings profiles for graduates which are needed to understand and design effective and sustainable student loan systems.

1 August 2019

Journal graphic

The US college loans system: Lessons from Australia and England

Journal article

There is wide agreement that the US student loan system faces significant problems. Seven million borrowers are in default and many more are not repaying for reasons such as returning to school, or economic hardship. The stress of repayments faced by many students results at least in part from the design of US student loans. Specifically, loans are organised like a mortgage, with fixed monthly repayments over a fixed period of time, creating a high repayment burden on borrowers with low income. This paper draws on the experience of the income-contingent loan (ICL) systems operating in England and Australia, in which monthly or two-weekly repayments are related to the borrower's income in that period, thus building in automatic insurance against inability to repay during periods of low income.

23 July 2019

Article graphic

Extra spending on education in England – the numbers explained

Comment

Almost all the candidates in the Conservative leadership election have promised higher levels of spending on education. With a Spending Review of some form due this year, we analyse the cost of potential commitments on schools and education spending.

18 June 2019

Article graphic

Report reveals benefits of Sure Start

Comment

Our research looks at the impacts that Sure Start had on children’s health during their primary school years from its start in 1999 and its peak in the late 2000s.

10 June 2019

Young child at school

What can we learn from Sure Start?

Explainer
To what extent has Sure Start benefitted children’s health? Which groups of children benefit the most? How might these benefits have come about?

4 June 2019

Publication graphic

The health effects of Sure Start

Report

From lagging well behind most European countries in the early 1990s, the UK is now one of the highest spenders on the under-5s in Europe (OECD, 2014). One of the biggest programmes for this age group is Sure Start. It offers families with children under the age of 5 a ‘one-stop shop’ for childcare and early education, health services, parenting support, and employment advice, with the aim of improving children’s school readiness, health, and social and emotional development.

3 June 2019

Article graphic

Costing the Augar reforms to higher education

Comment

The Augar Review – released yesterday – was wide reaching in its scope. Most importantly, the review suggests an important raft of changes to the further education sector and increases the power and scope of the post-18 education regulator, the Office for Students (as we discussed yesterday ). While these are the most significant features, there were also several changes to the student loan system that we untangle here. We confirm that the overall package of changes significantly reduces average debt while being broadly cost-neutral. It achieves that by extracting a large amount of money in future student loan repayments from middle-earning graduates.

31 May 2019