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Journal of International Economics Research

ISSN
Online: 3070-5665
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  Continuous publication

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Open access journal. All articles are freely available online with no APC.

Journal of International Economics Research
Full Length Article

Volume 4Issue 2PP: 26-34 • 2026

How Education and Investment Affect Economic Growth in Asian Developing Countries?

Malika Rajabova 1* ,
Nurdaulet Karabayev 2
1Tashkent State University of Economics, Uzbekistan
2Eurasian National University, Kazakhstan
* Corresponding Author.
Received: January 02, 2026 Revised: March 01, 2026 Accepted: April 05, 2026

Abstract

This study investigates how education and investment influence economic growth across selected Asian developing countries, with a particular focus on whether these relationships differ by income level and institutional context. Using panel data from 2010 to 2023, countries are divided into upper-middle-income (China, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Kazakhstan) and lower-middle-income (Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Pakistan, Kyrgyzstan, Bangladesh, Philippines) groups. The analysis employs multiple regression models to examine the effects of government education expenditure, school enrollment rate, gross capital formation, labor force participation, foreign direct investment, and population dynamics on GDP per capita. Diagnostic tests, including Variance Inflation Factor (VIF), are applied to ensure model reliability. The findings reveal that education plays a stronger role in promoting economic growth in upper-middle-income economies, while lower-middle-income countries experience weaker and less consistent relationships. The findings suggest that the growth effects of education and investment depend on development level and institutional quality, emphasizing the need for tailored policy approaches. In upper-middle-income countries, policies should prioritize improving education quality and aligning skills with labor market demands, while also strengthening the connection between investment and workforce capacity. In contrast, lower-middle-income countries require broader structural reforms, including better governance, improved education outcomes, and incentives for school completion.

Keywords

Economic growth Education expenditure Investment Asian developing countries Income classification School enrollment

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Rajabova, Malika, Karabayev, Nurdaulet . "How Education and Investment Affect Economic Growth in Asian Developing Countries?." Journal of International Economics Research, vol. Volume 4, no. Issue 2, 2026, pp. 26-34. DOI: https://doi.org/10.54216/JIER.040204
Rajabova, M., Karabayev, N. (2026). How Education and Investment Affect Economic Growth in Asian Developing Countries?. Journal of International Economics Research, Volume 4(Issue 2), 26-34. DOI: https://doi.org/10.54216/JIER.040204
Rajabova, Malika, Karabayev, Nurdaulet . "How Education and Investment Affect Economic Growth in Asian Developing Countries?." Journal of International Economics Research Volume 4, no. Issue 2 (2026): 26-34. DOI: https://doi.org/10.54216/JIER.040204
Rajabova, M., Karabayev, N. (2026) 'How Education and Investment Affect Economic Growth in Asian Developing Countries?', Journal of International Economics Research, Volume 4(Issue 2), pp. 26-34. DOI: https://doi.org/10.54216/JIER.040204
Rajabova M, Karabayev N. How Education and Investment Affect Economic Growth in Asian Developing Countries?. Journal of International Economics Research. 2026;Volume 4(Issue 2):26-34. DOI: https://doi.org/10.54216/JIER.040204
M. Rajabova, N. Karabayev, "How Education and Investment Affect Economic Growth in Asian Developing Countries?," Journal of International Economics Research, vol. Volume 4, no. Issue 2, pp. 26-34, 2026. DOI: https://doi.org/10.54216/JIER.040204
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