Reassessing a Decade of Reform: Workforce Development and the Changing Economy

Reassessing a Decade of Reform: Workforce Development and the Changing Economy

Dec 1999

Authors:

Thomas Bailey
Alexandra Gribovskaya
Teachers College, Columbia University

Executive Summary:

Education reform in the 1980s and 1990s emerged from a preoccupation with productivity and economic performance. In the 1980s, the country's education system was blamed for slowing productivity growth and weakening international competitiveness. By the end of the 1990s, the economic context has changed dramatically; unemployment rates are at historical lows, stock prices remain high, and impressive developments associated with computers and the Internet seem only to scratch the surface of the potential in that sector. Still, in education, we are implementing a reform agenda that was developed in one economic context and, according to its advocates, was designed to solve a particular set of economic problems. Thus, we want to ask whether an education reform agenda motivated to a large extent by a particular economic context is still appropriate now that that context appears to have changed.

In the first part of this report, we review the arguments advanced during the 1980s and early 1990s concerning the relationship between education and the economy and describe the education reform agenda that followed those arguments. We then review evidence about the economy and related education reforms that were developed during the 1990s. Based on this new evidence and experience, we then reassess the current education reform agenda, suggesting future policy and research directions.

More

Bailey, T., & Gribovskaya, A. (1999, December). Reassessing a decade of reform: Workforce development and the changing economy. Berkeley, CA: National Center for Research in Vocational Education.