Story Highlights
- Six in 10 Chinese now satisfied with their education
- Youngest Chinese most satisfied; men and women equally content
- However, a significant urban/rural gap persists
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- China's heightened spending on education in the past decade may be paying off, at least in its residents' eyes. More Chinese today (61%) express satisfaction with their own education than they did in 2009, when satisfaction was well below 50%.
China's investment in nine-year mandatory education has increased at 19.4% annually over the past decade, according to the Chinese Ministry of Finance. This expenditure has likely contributed to quadrupling the number of college graduates in the last 10 years. Therefore, it is not surprising that younger Chinese -- those currently or most recently involved in the education system -- are the most satisfied with their education. In 2015, three-quarters (75%) of Chinese aged 15 to 24 said they are satisfied, at least 16 percentage points higher than all other age groups.
Chinese Women Now as Satisfied as Men With Their Education
After lagging behind men in earlier years, today Chinese women are as likely as men to be satisfied with their education, at 61% each. Â鶹´«Ã½AV's findings generally mirror the tertiary education enrollment figures for women in China, where female university enrollment began rising in 2007 and now surpasses that of men, according to the World Bank.
Gap Persists in Urban/Rural Education Satisfaction
Despite the government's substantial education expenditures over the past decade, rural Chinese continue to lag behind their urban counterparts in satisfaction with their own education. Nearly two-thirds of those in large cities (65%) are currently satisfied, compared with six in 10 (60%) of Chinese living in rural areas -- although this is the narrowest urban/rural gap Â鶹´«Ã½AV has recorded since it began this measurement in 2006.
Bottom Line
Chinese may be reaping the rewards of increased government spending on education -- particularly women, whose satisfaction with their education has surged by 23 points in the past six years alone.
Satisfaction among rural Chinese has increased dramatically as well, but the urban/rural education gap remains. However, students in rural China have just begun receiving a significant boost in education subsidies. Previously, nine-year compulsory education students were entitled to varying amounts of public funds based on the cost of living in each geographic area and on household income, resulting in much larger subsidies for children living in large cities than those in rural China. But beginning this year, those education subsidies will be standardized across the country. This means rural students, as well as children of workers who migrate to large cities for employment, will receive the same public education funding as urban children. As funding parity takes hold, the urban/rural gap in education satisfaction may narrow even more.
Survey Methods
The 2015 results are based on interviews with 4,265 adults, aged 15 and older, including a national sample conducted face to face in China and an oversample conducted by landline telephone in Shanghai, Beijing and Guangzhou in July 2015. The 2012 results are based on interviews with 4,201 adults, aged 15 and older, including a national sample conducted face to face in China and an oversample conducted by landline telephone in Shanghai, Beijing and Guangzhou in August-September 2009. For results based on the total sample of national adults, the margin of sampling error is ±2 percentage points at the 95% confidence level. All reported margins of sampling error include computed design effects for weighting.
For more complete methodology and specific survey dates, please review .
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