Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Economic and Social Context of US Higher Education Josef C. Brada Arizona State University 1.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Economic and Social Context of US Higher Education Josef C. Brada Arizona State University 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Economic and Social Context of US Higher Education Josef C. Brada Arizona State University 1

2 The University as a Firm What is maximized? What is produced? How is revenue obtained? Who are the customers? What are the constraints? 2

3 What is maximized? PRESTIGE Among Peers, Students, Alumni, Faculty, Employers, Government the public and the participants here 3

4 What is produced? Graduates Educating students is a process of value added MBA example Creates competition for good students Appeals to US social values – social mobility and meritocratic principle Research Externalities Appropriability Material Incentives vs Scholarly Values 4

5 How is revenue obtained? Tuition from students – does not cover even costs of instruction, much less other costs of operating the university. Government subsidies – largely tied to students not to institutions. Sales of research output. Alumni and other private contributions. 5

6 Who are customers? (Stakeholders) See previous slide Plus faculty 6

7 Implications for Spending on Higher Education More a private decision than a public one Private preferences are for “more prestigious” education than voters want and for more “product differentiation” Higher US spending thus partly a reflection of desire for product variety 7

8 Strategy choices – A choice for the university High Quality vs Low Quality Research vs No Research Private vs Public Choice of Market Segment – Elite – Mass – “Universal” 8

9 ….another strategic choice: Globalization Students – Over 20% of ASU’s graduate students are foreign.* Faculty & Researchers – Competition becomes global – the reach of research does too (thought leadership a key element of prestige) – H1-B Visas (1999-2000): IBM, 124; U of Washington, 113; U of Pennsylvania, 97; Stanford, 73; Harvard, 70; Yale, 61. *In 2005, there were 65,299 non-European students seeking a PhD in Europe. 9

10 Constraints on strategy Students – can and will move; good ones in short supply – peer effects are strong Faculty – the same Government – limits selectivity Government and business shape viable research strategies – as do prestige objectives of university and faculty Donors and other major contributors shape strategy 10

11 2 key concepts Student as customer – Prestige vs price – Price is a powerful motivator for student performance – Price is a powerful motivator for university performance – Not always a good guide to “quality” of education Professor as entrepreneur Competes for money, prestige, access to research resources & good students Active internal and external market means competition in ongoing – wage setting autonomy of universities Competition is performance based – research key Must choose how to allocate time & effort 11

12 Pricing “education” Tuition < Average cost of “education” Where does rest of the money come from? – State schools get subsidies – though much of this goes to students – Donations (good students => more giving, higher prestige => more donations) – Research “profit” – requires good students & good faculty Conclusion: better (more prestigious) schools subsidize students more -- even if they charge higher tuition 12

13 Other “pricing” decisions Subsidization by program of study Prestige and allocation of funds (graduate vs PhD; professional programs) 13

14 Some thoughts for following the US model - 1 Do US universities have a different/better objective function or just more leeway to achieve it ? – Rankings are a proxy for what we want to achieve – not the real objective. Does Europe want the same thing as America? 14

15 Some thoughts for following the US model - 2 Will spending increases help Europe raise its rankings? (3.5 vs 1.5 % GDP) – Yes, but by how much. – Important synergies between $ and autonomy. – In the US, there are greater possibilities for product differentiation and private “choice” on spending. – Europe has reformed much less in PhDs. – Less scope for globalization. In the context of this talk Erasmus is not globalization. 15

16 Some thoughts for following the US model - 3 Can Europe master the evolution from elite to mass and universal higher education? Institutional innovation faces more resistance in a “state-led” model than in one where supply can be provided by new entrants from the private sector and evaluated by the market, not by the Minster of Education. Differences between self-selected and “imposed” strategies. 16


Download ppt "The Economic and Social Context of US Higher Education Josef C. Brada Arizona State University 1."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google