According
to the recent report from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development, the two countries will
produce about 40 per cent of post secondary degree-holders by 2020. The United States
and some European Union countries will produce about 25 per cent.
The
report, part of the organization’s series Education Indicators in Focus, takes into account higher education graduates between the ages of 25 and 34 in OECD and Group of Twenty member countries -- 42
countries in total.
The
gap between China and the United States
-- the two leading producers of graduates in 2010, with 18 and 14 per cent -- will be significant by 2020. China is expected to produce 29 per cent of all
higher education graduates studied in the report, and the United States is expected to
produce 11 per cent of all those graduates. India , which produced 11
per cent of graduates in 2010, is expected to overtake the United States
and produce 12 per cent of the share of graduates by the end of this decade.