Page 20 - Education and Inclusive Growth --Jong-Wha Lee Korea University
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               statistically insignificant effect on income inequality when controlling for other
               variables including educational inequality.
                   The result in Column (2) shows that educational expansion was a major
               driver for improving educational distribution. Hence, the average level of
               educational attainment can have an indirect effect on income inequality by
               changing educational inequality. The estimated coefficient of educational
               attainment, -0.035, suggests that an increase in the average schooling of about
               three years, that is about one standard deviation, decreases the education
               Gini coefficient by about 0.11, which accounts for about 60% of the standard
               deviation of the education Gini coefficient. This reduction of educational
               inequality is expected to decrease income Gini by about 1.3% point. Therefore,
               increase in educational attainment is the major driver improving the education
               Gini coefficient, thereby affecting income distribution.
                   The results of Equations (7) and (8) reported in Lee and Lee (2018) show
               that fast income increase, trade expansion, and rapid technological progress
               were the main causes of the rising income inequality in many economies in
               recent decades and the improved educational attainment and inequality played
               important roles in mitigating these income-unequalizing forces. Considering
               the policy variables, higher social benefit expenditures contributed to reducing
               income inequality, and higher public spending helped narrowing educational
               equality, thereby implicitly improving income inequality.
                            Education, Skills and Technology
                   Empirical findings in the previous sections suggest that strong educational
               expansion played a major role for sustained and equitable economic growth in
               the last three decades. However, critics point out the supply of skilled workers





