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Economic Research: How Increasing Income Inequality Is Dampening U.S. Economic Growth, And Possible Ways To Change The Tide potential addition to growth of a worker who has reached his or her full potential. The pace of U.S. education is also falling behind its peers (see chart 5). Approximately 43% of Americans aged 25-34 had a college degree in 2011, compared with more than half of people the same age in Canada, Japan, and Korea. Moreover, the proportion of degree holders among Americans aged 25-34 is virtually the same as that among those 55-64, meaning that graduation rates haven't changed much--a sharp contrast with the OECD average and a number of other countries, where graduation rates have increased significantly. As today's U.S. educational attainment slips behind other countries, the U.S.' ability to remain economically competitive in the international market is threatened. Chart 5 U.S. Education Is Slipping Behind a2o-4 a55-64 = fo Cal a 3 60 oy om 50 Lae a » 40 a oy 2 30 a a tc 20 a ‘So 2 10 ed = a 6 = Canada FranceGermany Italy Japan Korea MexicoThe U.K. U.S. OECD average Source: The Organisation for Economic Co-opration and Development (OECD), “Education AtA Glance 2013." ® Standard & Poors 2014. What if, instead, we broke that cycle? What if the supply of educated workers picked up its pace, and, more or less, kept up with technological changes? The US. has been no stranger to this in the past. In the early part of this century, technological advancements were accompanied by an education boom (29). What would be the impact to the economy and to people's pocketbooks if the U.S. workforce's pace of education were to reach rates of education seen 50 years ago? That was when the American workforce gained a year of education from 1960 to 1965, which is a bit stronger than the period from 1950 to 1980, where they gained an average of about eight months of education every five years (30). In this scenario, the US. would add another year of education to the A

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