F. Green et al., Post-school education and training policy in development states: the casesof Taiwan and South Korea, J EDUC POLI, 14(3), 1999, pp. 301-315
The integration of economic and skill formation policies in South Korea and
Taiwan through modified forms of state planning have been more successful
than free-market alternatives in contributing both to economic growth and r
aising levels of educational achievement. However, this pattern of integrat
ion is now coming under pressure from a number of directions - the declinin
g power of the State to compel employers to train their workers, the realiz
ation that too tight a link between economic and skill formation policies h
as inhibited educational creativity and the impact of the global economy. T
hese influences have produced substantial reform of the education and train
ing system in South Korea, but more evolutionary policies have been pursued
in Taiwan. But in both countries there remains a commitment to steering th
e economy, which is absent in Britain. In the absence of such a commitment
a strategic approach to education and skill formation is likely to have onl
y a limited impact.