College graduation rates continued to improve around the world during 
the recession, according to a recent international economic study. In 
more developed countries, the percentage of adults with the equivalent 
of a college degree rose to more than 30% in 2010. In the United States,
 it was more than 40%, which is among the highest percentages in the 
world.
However, improvements in higher education are harder to 
achieve in these countries. More developed economies have had the most 
educated populations for some time. While these countries have steadily 
increased education rates, the increases have been modest compared to 
developing economies. At just above 1%, the U.S. has had one of the 
smallest annual growth rates for higher education since 1997. In Poland,
 an emerging market, the annualized rate was 7.2% from 1997 to 2010.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s (OECD) Education at a Glance 2012 report
 calculated the proportion of residents with a college or college 
equivalent degree in the group’s 34 member nations and other major 
economies. Based on the report, 24/7 Wall St. identified the 10 
countries with the highest proportion of adults with a college degree.
The
 majority of countries that spend the most on education have the most 
educated populations. As in previous years, the best educated countries 
tend to spend the most on tertiary education as a percentage of gross 
domestic product. The United States and Canada, among the most educated 
countries, spend the first and third most respectively.
In an 
interview with 24/7 Wall St., OECD’s Chief Media Officer Matthias Rumpf 
explained that educational funding appears to have a strong relationship
 to how many residents pursue higher education. Private spending on 
educational institutions relative to public expenditure is much larger 
in the countries with the highest rates of college-equivalent education.
 Among the countries with the highest proportion of residents with a 
tertiary education, a disproportionate amount of spending comes from 
private sources, including tuition and donations. The OECD average 
proportion of private spending is 16%. In the U.S., 28% of funding comes
 from private sources. In South Korea, another country in the top 10, it
 is more than 40%.
Having more education helped people all over 
the world stay employed during the recession, according to the OECD. 
Between 2008 and 2010, unemployment rates among developed nations jumped
 from 8.8% to 12.5% for people with less than a high school education, 
and from 4.9% to 7.6% for people with only a high school education. For 
those with the equivalent of a college degree or more, the jobless rate 
went from 3.3% to just 4.7%.
Among the 10 countries with the 
highest proportion of educated adults, unemployment rates for those with
 a college equivalent ranged from 2.8% in Australia to 5.4% in the 
Canada. In each country, the rate remained lower than that country’s 
national average.
The OECD
 provided information on the percentage of residents aged 25 to 64 with a
 tertiary education for each of its 34 member countries, as well as for 
eight other nations. 2010 statistics on educational attainment, 
graduation rates, GDP per capita and unemployment rates also were 
provided by the OECD. The latest figures covering country-level 
education expenditure are from 2009.
These are the 10 most educated countries in the world.
1. Canada
> Pct. population with tertiary education: 51%
> Average annual growth rate (2000-2010): 2.4% (5th lowest)
> GDP per capita: $39,050 (11th highest)
Canada
 is the only nation where more than half of all adults had a tertiary 
education in 2010. This was up from 40% of the adult population in 2000,
 when the country also ranked as the world’s most educated. Canada has 
managed to become a world leader in education without being a leader in 
education spending, which totaled just 6.1% of GDP in 2009, or less than
 the 6.3% average for the OECD. A large amount of its spending went 
towards tertiary education, on which the country spent 2.5% of GDP, 
trailing only the United States and South Korea. One of the few areas 
Canada did not perform well in was attracting international students, 
who made up just 6.6% of all tertiary students — lower than the OECD’s 
8% average.
2. Israel
Pct. population with tertiary education: 46%
> Average annual growth rate (2000-2010): N/A
> GDP per capita: $26,531 (13th lowest)
Israel
 only joined the OECD in 2010. That year, its GDP per capita was more 
than $7,000 below the OECD’s average. Despite this, the country’s high 
school graduation rate was 92% in 2010, well above the OECD’s 84% 
average. Some 46% of residents had a tertiary education, versus 31% for 
the OECD. Israel spent 7.2% of GDP on educational institutions in 2009, 
the sixth most among all nations. And for the first time, preschool 
education will become free in 2012 even for children as young as three 
years old, Haaretz newspaper reported. This should benefit Israel as, 
according to the OECD, “early childhood education is associated with 
better performance later on in school.”
3. Japan
> Pct. population with tertiary education: 45%
> Average annual growth rate (2000-2010): 2.9%  (10th lowest)
> GDP per capita: $33,785 (18th highest)
In
 2009, Japan spent 1.6% of GDP on college or college equivalent 
education, on par with the OECD’s average, and just 5.2% of GDP on 
education overall, well below the OECD’s 6.3% average. Despite its 
relatively light spending, the country still had a high school 
graduation rate of 96%, the second best among all nations in 2010, while
 the percentage of its population with a tertiary education was 14 
percentage points higher than the OECD’s average. However, according to 
The Wall Street Journal, recent university graduates in Japan have 
struggled to find work, with 15% those graduating in the spring of 2012 
neither employed nor enrolled in further education as of August.
4. United States
> Pct. population with tertiary education: 42%
> Average annual growth rate (2000-2010): 1.3% (2nd lowest)
> GDP per capita: $46,548 (4th highest)
Although
 the U.S. is one of just a few nations where more than 40% of people had
 a tertiary education in 2010, its education system is not without 
problems. Among the concerns, the graduation rate for upper secondary 
students in 2010 was 77%, well below the average rate of 84% for the 
OECD. Even though graduation rates were relatively low, the U.S. is one 
of the biggest spenders on education, with related expenditures equaling
 7.3% of GDP in 2009. The U.S. was also the world’s largest spender on 
tertiary education in 2009, at 2.6% of GDP. The majority of funds for 
higher education, totaling 1.6% of GDP, came from private sources.
5. New Zealand
> Pct. population with tertiary education: 41%
> Average annual growth rate (2000-2010): 3.5% (13th highest)
> GDP per capita: $29,711 (17th lowest)
The
 tiny country’s population has grown 13.2% between 2000 and 2010, as has
 the country’s education system. The number of people with a college or 
college equivalent education rose from 29% to 41% over the period. The 
country also has become a destination of choice for international 
students, who made up 14.2% of tertiary students in 2010. New Zealand is
 also a leader in educating scientists, with 16% of students choosing a 
science for their field of study at the tertiary level — the highest 
proportion of any country.
6. South Korea
> Pct. population with tertiary education: 40%
> Average annual growth rate (2000-2010): 5.2% (6th highest)
> GDP per capita: $28,797 (16th lowest)
Between
 2000 and 2010, the percentage of South Koreans with a college education
 or more rose from 24% to 40%. In addition to being well-educated, many 
residents also invested considerable amounts towards their schooling. In
 2009, only Iceland spent more than South Korea’s 8% of GDP. That year, 
no country in the study contributed more private funds for education at 
all levels than South Korea, at 3.1% of GDP, or for tertiary education, 
at 1.9%. Despite the investment, education does not appear to have a 
measurable impact on job seekers. The unemployment rate in 2010 for 
those with a tertiary degree was 3.3% — low relative to the OECD average
 of 4.7%, but not much lower than the 3.7% rate for all workers in the 
country.
7. United Kingdom
> Pct. population with tertiary education: 38%
> Average annual growth rate: 4.0% (10th highest)
> GDP per capita: $35,756 (15th highest)
Between
 2000 and 2010, the percentage of U.K. residents with a tertiary 
education rose 12 percentage points. The country’s universities are also
 popular among students from other nations. International students make 
up 16% of enrollment. The country recently has had a shift in how 
education is financed. While in 2000 the percentage of funds from 
private sources was 14.8%, it rose to 31.1% by 2009. Students also must 
cover more of the cost of higher education than in the past, as the cap 
on tuition fees was raised from 3,290 pounds to 9,000 pounds for the 
2012-2013 year.
8. Finland
> Pct. population with tertiary education: 38%
> Average annual growth rate (2000-2010): 1.8% (4th lowest)
> GDP per capita: $36,307 (14th highest)
Finland
 spent 6.4% of its gross domestic product on education in 2009, with 
97.6% of these funds coming from public sources, more than any country 
in the report. Between 2000 and 2010, high school graduation rates rose 
by just two percentage points, while the number of people with a college
 education or more rose by just six percentage points. As a result, 
Finland fell from fourth to eighth place among the world’s most educated
 countries. Finnish workers with a tertiary education were far more 
likely to be employed than those without such an education — the 
unemployment rate was 4.4% for residents with a degree and 8.4% for 
those without.
9. Australia
> Pct. population with tertiary education: 38%
> Average annual growth rate (2000-2010): 3.2% (12th lowest)
> GDP per capita: $40,790 (6th highest)
Australia
 is a preferred destination for many international students, which is 
why it should come as no surprise that they accounted for 21.2% of the 
country’s tertiary students in 2010, higher than every country other 
than Luxembourg. Finding a job in the country is not especially hard for
 those with a college degree. The country had an unemployment rate of 
just 2.8% in 2010 for workers with a tertiary degree, compared to a rate
 of just 5.2% for all workers.
10. Ireland
> Pct. population with tertiary education: 37%
> Average annual growth rate (2000-2010): 7.3% (the highest)
> GDP per capita: $40,478 (7th highest)
From
 2000 through 2010, the percentage of people with a college education or
 more in Ireland nearly doubled, rising at an annual average of 7.3% — 
faster than any country in the study. High school graduation rates also 
rose during that time, from 74% to 94%. Education has become especially 
critical for male job seekers in Ireland’s workforce, as 6.3% of men 
with a tertiary education were unemployed in 2010 versus 15.2% for all 
men nationwide. 
Culled from www.http://finance.yahoo.com
 
 
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