Page 4 - Japanese Growth and Education: 演講人:Motohisa Kaneko教授
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104      ᐿ࿲ၾආӉj઺ԃٙɢඎ





                  an old feudal society predominantly dependent on agriculture. Literacy rates

                  among the population were fairly high (Dore, 1976), but there was no concept of
                  modern curriculum or school system. Nonetheless, the leaders of the new-born
                  regime deemed education, particularly primary schools as the key to national

                  development.

                  Education and the stages of development


                       Before going into details, it would be worthwhile to overview the relation
                  between the changes in participation in education and the stages of economic

                  development over 150 years since Meiji Restoration in 1868. Figure 1 shows
                  long-term changes of enrollment rate in primary, secondary and tertiary
                  education since 1870s. It indicates that the development had three distinctive

                  stages (Kaneko,  2013b).
                       Phase 1: Since Meiji restoration (1968) until WW1. From the perspective
                  of educational development, this is the period of establishment of the modern

                  education system, and diffusion of primary education. From the perspective of
                  economic development, this is the period of institutional build-up along with
                  initial accumulation of social capital (Ohkawa and Rosovsky, 1973).

                       Phase 2: The period between two World Wars. The focus was set on the
                  completion of universal attendance at the primary level. Meanwhile, secondary
                  and tertiary education started expansion. From the perspective of economic

                  development, this is the initial stage of modern economic growth.
                       Phase 3: With the intermission due to WWII, education and economy
                  went into a new phase of development. Lower secondary education became

                  compulsory, and higher secondary education grew rapidly to reach practically
                  universal.  Higher education started expansion – participation (including four-
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