Publication | Closed Access
Why Isn't the Whole World Developed?
626
Citations
134
References
1981
Year
Economic DevelopmentNew Production TechniquesEducational AttainmentSustainable DevelopmentEducationEconomic GrowthWorldwide SpreadEconomic HistorySocietal ChallengeEducational SystemFormal LearningSociology Of EducationWorld War IiNational DevelopmentGlobal StrategyEconomicsSocial ClassHistory Of EducationInternational EducationGlobalizationWhole World DevelopedBusinessScience And Technology StudiesTechnologyEducation PolicyWorld-systems TheoryEducation Economics
The worldwide spread of modern economic growth has depended chiefly on the diffusion of a body of knowledge concerning new production techniques. The acquisition and application of this knowledge by different countries has been governed largely by whether their populations have acquired traits and motivations associated with formal schooling. To judge from the historical experience of the world's twenty-five largest nations, the establishment and expansion of formal schooling has depended in large part on political conditions and ideological influences. The limited spread of modern economic growth before World War II has thus been due, at bottom, to important political and ideological differences throughout the world that affected the timing of the establishment and expansion of mass schooling. Since World War II there has been growing uniformity among the nations of the world, modern education systems have been established almost everywhere, and the spread of modern economic growth has noticeably accelerated.
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