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Made for Export: Tertiary Education and Labor Export in the Philippines

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Abstract:

Development scholars, heavily informed by the cases of the four Asian Tigers, have attributed success in development to education and domestic political institutions. Although the Philippines looked even more promising than the Asian Tigers before they began developing, the country has not become a development success. On the education dimension, by the 1970s the Philippines was comparable to most developed countries with its adult literacy rate of 83% and high enrollment rates in all levels of schools. In terms of political institutions, the Philippines was Asia’s first democracy after declaring independence from Spanish rule in 1898. Instead of furthering development, educational and political advances in the Philippines have led to an enormous exodus of labor. Failing to utilize its highly educated labor force in the domestic economy, the state focused its attention on exporting its workers by creating a set of elaborate institutions to facilitate overseas employment. Why did the Philippine government develop institutions for exporting labor rather than focus its energy on building the domestic economy? This puzzle can be understood in terms of the intimate connection between the capacity of the state to control the educational system, labor export and economic development. This paper argues that one of the major reasons why the Philippine state had to take an active role in exporting its surplus labor is because of the high autonomy given to the private market for higher education that was producing a large educated but unemployable population.

Most Common Document Word Stems:

educ (207), philippin (163), region (153), employ (91), tertiari (85), labor (81), worker (75), enrol (74), 19 (72), privat (70), oversea (68), ofw (65), develop (62), institut (56), unemploy (52), percent (51), higher (48), filipino (48), economi (48), urban (47), export (47),

Author's Keywords:

labor migration, higher education in developing countries, economic development, emigration, Philippines
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Name: International Studies Association
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MLA Citation:

Ruiz, Neil. "Made for Export: Tertiary Education and Labor Export in the Philippines" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Studies Association, Town & Country Resort and Convention Center, San Diego, California, USA, Mar 22, 2006 <Not Available>. 2009-05-25 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p99755_index.html>

APA Citation:

Ruiz, N. G. , 2006-03-22 "Made for Export: Tertiary Education and Labor Export in the Philippines" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Studies Association, Town & Country Resort and Convention Center, San Diego, California, USA Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2009-05-25 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p99755_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Abstract: Development scholars, heavily informed by the cases of the four Asian Tigers, have attributed success in development to education and domestic political institutions. Although the Philippines looked even more promising than the Asian Tigers before they began developing, the country has not become a development success. On the education dimension, by the 1970s the Philippines was comparable to most developed countries with its adult literacy rate of 83% and high enrollment rates in all levels of schools. In terms of political institutions, the Philippines was Asia’s first democracy after declaring independence from Spanish rule in 1898. Instead of furthering development, educational and political advances in the Philippines have led to an enormous exodus of labor. Failing to utilize its highly educated labor force in the domestic economy, the state focused its attention on exporting its workers by creating a set of elaborate institutions to facilitate overseas employment. Why did the Philippine government develop institutions for exporting labor rather than focus its energy on building the domestic economy? This puzzle can be understood in terms of the intimate connection between the capacity of the state to control the educational system, labor export and economic development. This paper argues that one of the major reasons why the Philippine state had to take an active role in exporting its surplus labor is because of the high autonomy given to the private market for higher education that was producing a large educated but unemployable population.

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Associated Document Available Political Research Online
Associated Document Available International Studies Association

Document Type: application/pdf
Page count: 45
Word count: 12287
Text sample:
DRAFT *DO NOT CITE WITHOUT THE PERMISSION OF THE AUTHOR* Made for Export: Tertiary Education and Labor Export in the Philippines (Work-In-Progress: September 2005 version) Draft prepared for the 2006 Annual Convention of the International Studies Association San Diego CA USA March 25 2006 Neil G. Ruiz1 Department of Political Science Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Avenue E53-368 Cambridge MA 02139 USA Phone: (617) 823-0279 nruiz@mit.edu 1 Neil Ruiz is a Ph.D. candidate at the MIT Department of
region_10 region_8 0 .02 .04 .06 .08 .1 0 .02 .04 .06 .08 .1 Tertiary Enrollment per capita Tertiary Enrollment per capita 44


Similar Titles:
The Labor Exporting State: Migration and Higher Education in the Philippines

Made for Export: Labor Migration, State Power, and Higher Education in a Developing Society


 
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