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Foreword<br />

The 2016 Global Education Monitoring Report (GEM Report) is both masterful <strong>and</strong> disquieting. This is a big<br />

report: comprehensive, in-depth <strong>and</strong> perspicacious. It is also an unnerving report. It establishes that<br />

education is at the heart of sustainable development <strong>and</strong> the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),<br />

yet it also makes clear just how far away we are from achieving the SDGs. This report should set off<br />

alarm bells around the world <strong>and</strong> lead to a historic scale-up of actions to achieve SDG 4.<br />

The GEM Report provides an authoritative account of how education is the most vital input for<br />

every dimension of sustainable development. Better education leads to greater prosperity, improved<br />

agriculture, better health outcomes, less violence, more gender equality, higher social capital <strong>and</strong><br />

an improved natural environment. Education is key to helping <strong>people</strong> around the world underst<strong>and</strong><br />

why sustainable development is such a vital concept for our common future. Education gives us the<br />

key tools – economic, social, technological, even ethical – to take on the SDGs <strong>and</strong> to achieve them.<br />

These facts are spelled out in exquisite <strong>and</strong> unusual detail throughout the report. There is a wealth of<br />

information to be mined in the tables, graphs <strong>and</strong> texts.<br />

Yet the report also emphasizes the remarkable gaps between where the world st<strong>and</strong>s today on<br />

education <strong>and</strong> where it has promised to arrive as of 2030. The gaps in educational attainment between<br />

rich <strong>and</strong> poor, within <strong>and</strong> between countries, are simply appalling. In many poor countries, poor children<br />

face nearly insurmountable obstacles under current conditions. They lack books at home; have no<br />

opportunity for pre-primary school; <strong>and</strong> enter facilities without electricity, water, hygiene, qualified<br />

teachers, textbooks <strong>and</strong> the other appurtenances of a basic education, much less a quality education.<br />

The implications are staggering. While SDG 4 calls for universal completion of upper secondary<br />

education by 2030, the current completion rate in low-income countries is a meagre 14% (Table 10.3).<br />

The GEM Report undertakes an important exercise to determine how many countries will reach the<br />

2030 target on the current trajectory, or even on a path that matches the fastest improving country in<br />

the region. The answer is sobering: We need unprecedented progress, starting almost immediately, in<br />

order to have a shot at success with SDG 4.<br />

Cynics might say, ‘We told you, SDG 4 is simply unachievable’, <strong>and</strong> suggest that we accept that ‘reality’.<br />

Yet as the report hammers home in countless ways, such complacency is reckless <strong>and</strong> immoral. If we<br />

leave the current young generation without adequate schooling, we doom them <strong>and</strong> the world to future<br />

poverty, environmental ills, <strong>and</strong> even social violence <strong>and</strong> instability for decades to come. There can<br />

be no excuse for complacency. The message of this report is that we need to get our act together to<br />

accelerate educational attainment in an unprecedented manner.<br />

One of the keys for acceleration is financing. Here again, the report makes for sobering reading.<br />

Development aid for education today is lower than it was in 2009 (Figure 20.7). This is staggeringly<br />

short-sighted of the rich countries. Do these donor countries really believe that they are ‘saving money’<br />

by underinvesting in aid for education in the world’s low-income countries? After reading this report,<br />

the leaders <strong>and</strong> citizens in the high income world will be deeply aware that investing in education is<br />

fundamental for global well-being, <strong>and</strong> that the current level of aid, at around US$5 billion per year<br />

for primary education – just US$5 per person per year in the rich countries! – is a tragically small<br />

investment for the world’s future sustainable development <strong>and</strong> peace.<br />

ii<br />

FOREWORD

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