One way to read the graph is that there are basically no countries with very low levels of education that have managed to be democratic over the long term, and almost every country with a high level of education has remained a stable democracy. […] Out of the 19 countries in this sample with more than 5.3 years of schooling (the current level in Iran) in 1960, 17 have average democracy scores above 7.9. Fifteen of these have been perfectly democratic, at least by the standards of Polity IV. Only Poland and Hungary were dictatorships, and one can certainly argue that those places would have been democracies in 1960s if it were not for Soviet troops. (via Want a Stronger Democracy? Invest in Education - Economix Blog - NYTimes.com)
Vajon az oktatasban eltoltott evek szama es az oktatas minosege magasan korrelal?
![ad-libitum:
One way to read the graph is that there are basically no countries with very low levels of education that have managed to be democratic over the long term, and almost every country with a high level of education has remained a stable democracy. […] Out of the 19 countries in this sample with more than 5.3 years of schooling (the current level in Iran) in 1960, 17 have average democracy scores above 7.9. Fifteen of these have been perfectly democratic, at least by the standards of Polity IV. Only Poland and Hungary were dictatorships, and one can certainly argue that those places would have been democracies in 1960s if it were not for Soviet troops. (via Want a Stronger Democracy? Invest in Education - Economix Blog - NYTimes.com)
Vajon az oktatasban eltoltott evek szama es az oktatas minosege magasan korrelal?](http://1.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_ksjepsc9Zk1qzggf7o1_500.jpg)