Ireland ranks last in investment in education in OECD

https://www.rte.ie/news/ireland/2024/0910/1469344-oecd-education/

Posted by rgiggs11

10 Comments

  1. Before anyone mentions that GDP isn’t a good measure for Ireland :

    It’s not just a a problem relative to GDP. We’re below average on spend per pupil as well (in dollars purchasing power).

    Ireland spends $10,959 per pupil at primary level.

    OECD Average is $11,905

    Germany: $12,829

    UK: $13,797

    US: $15,270

    Denmark: $15,598

     

    [https://www.oecd.org/en/publications/education-at-a-glance-2024_c00cad36-en/full-report/component-20.html#chapter-d1e19374-df8331a747](https://www.oecd.org/en/publications/education-at-a-glance-2024_c00cad36-en/full-report/component-20.html#chapter-d1e19374-df8331a747)

  2. DesignerWest1136 on

    The quality of education in this country is shite so no surprises here really.

    Edit: I forgot that I’m on r/Ireland where people just really cannot stand any criticism of Ireland or Irish people no matter how blatantly true or fair it is. My bad lads.

  3. Is this the canary in the coal mine, or a rare example of Ireland getting excellent value for money in public spending?

    I feel like we regularly hit near the top of education quality and accessibility rankings?

  4. Willing-Departure115 on

    Whenever someone quotes GDP in the context of government spending, it’s because they want more. Our GDP is a crappy distorted number. Looking at spending per pupil we’re more like middle of the pack but below the likes of the UK, and could afford to do more.

  5. Our GDP is meaningless, but the one thing I would say is when I did a total spend on education in € divided by population, Ireland seemed to be spending slightly less than the UK per capita, which is surprising.

    As % of GDP isn’t useful but raw €$£ spending per student in similar high income countries should give a much better idea of it.