G LO B A L E D U C AT I O N M O N I TO R I N G R E P O R T 2 0 1 6
SUMMARY
Education in the other Sustainable
Development Goals
T
he 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development recognizes not only the importance of a separate education goal
but also the need to achieve other goals through education. Among SDGs other than SDG 4, there are indicators
that refer to education directly and indirectly.
DIRECT REFERENCES TO EDUCATION
Education is
directly mentioned
in global indicators
for five sustainable
development goals
outside SDG 4
Education is directly mentioned in five global indicators outside SDG 4: on government
spending on education, health and social protection; on education as a means of achieving
gender equality; on youth not in education, employment or training; and on global
citizenship education and education for sustainable development.
INDIRECT REFERENCES TO EDUCATION
In addition to monitoring indicators that explicitly refer to education, future GEM Reports
will pay attention to indirect references to education in the other SDGs. Three examples
are highlighted: education as a factor associated with other development outcomes; indicators that refer to human
resource capacity, which are related to professional and higher education; and the potential role of adult education.
Disaggregating relevant global indicators by education levels would shed more light on the underlying inequality that
obstructs achievement of the SDG targets. Global indicators that could be monitored this way include those related
to poverty, malnutrition, child marriage, access to improved sanitation, access to electricity, unemployment, slum
populations, recycling, disaster deaths, violence and birth registration. For example, across 54 low and middle countries
with data for 2008–2015, the average number of births per 1,000 women was 176 among women with no education,
142 with primary education, 61 with secondary and 13 with tertiary.
F I G U RE 1 8:
Education is positively associated with desirable development outcomes
Adolescent birth rate (births per 1,000 women, aged 15 to 19 years), 1997–2014
300
No education
Primary
Secondary
Higher
Births per 1,000 women
250
200
150
100
50
0
1998 2011 1998 2014
1997 2009 2000 2011
Cameroon
Madagascar
Ghana
Western and Central
Africa
Ethiopia
Eastern and Southern
Africa
2001 2011 2007 2013
Nepal
Pakistan
Southern Asia
1997 2013 2000 2014
Yemen
Egypt
Northern Africa and
Western Asia
2000 2012 2000 2012
Haiti
Peru
Latin America
and the Caribbean
2000 2014 1997 2012
Cambodia
Indonesia
Eastern and
South-eastern Asia
Source: Demographic and Health Survey STATcompiler (2016).
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