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Private Higher Education: Funding Issues

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Title: Private Higher Education: Funding Issues


1
Private Higher Education Funding Issues
  • Conference on Private Higher Education18-19
    November 2008Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaNorman
    LaRocquenlarocque_at_adb.org

2
Private Higher Education Context
  • Large and growing private higher education (HE)
    in many countries in both developed and
    developing world
  • Growth due to many factors, including
  • Inability of public sector to meet demand for HE
  • Favorable regulatory reform
  • Growth in private economy fueling demand for new,
    more job-oriented skills
  • Growing diversity of student backgrounds
  • Diverse sector for-profit and not-for-profit
    HEIs, stand-alone HEIs and chains, corporate
    universities, franchises/affiliations, online
    universities, public/private hybrids

3
Private Higher Education International Context
  • Private sector significant in many Asian
    countries (eg. Japan, South Korea, Indonesia,
    Philippines) and Latin America (eg. Colombia,
    Brazil, Chile)
  • Smaller, but still significant private sector
    elsewhere (eg. Pakistan, Egypt, Malaysia, India)
  • Considerable growth in private HE in many
    countries developing countries and emerging
    markets (eg. Transition Economies, Arab countries)

4
Private Sector Share of Higher Education
Enrollments, Various Countries
Source PROPHE
5
Funding of Private Education International
Context
  • Public funding of private schools is common
    Indonesia, Bangladesh, Chile, Netherlands,
    Philippines, Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan,
    Canada, USA, India, etc
  • Many governments do fund private higher education
    institutions (HEIs), but this practice is less
    common than at the school level
  • Examples of countries that provide direct
    subsidies to private HEIs include Argentina,
    Chile, India, Indonesia, Belgium, Finland,
    Hungary, Japan, Pakistan, Korea and New Zealand,
    etc
  • Where assistance to private HEIs is provided, it
    is generally much lower than for public HEIs

6
Percent of Public Expenditure on Direct
Assistance to Private Tertiary Education
Institutions, Various Countries/Years
Source OECD
7
Percent of Public Expenditure on Indirect
Assistance to Private Sector, Various Countries
and Years
Source OECD
8
Direct and Indirect Assistance to Private Sector,
Various Countries/Years
Source OECD
9
Funding of Private Higher Education Types of
Assistance
  • Various kinds of assistance to private HE sector
  • Assistance can differ significantly depending on
    country and circumstances
  • Operating versus capital assistance
  • Direct versus indirect assistance
    (institution-based versus student-based
    assistance)
  • Student scholarships/grants versus student loans
  • Monetary versus in-kind assistance
  • Spending versus tax-based assistance
  • Capacity-building versus operational assistance

10
Public Funding of Private HE Types of Assistance
  • Direct Assistance
  • Subsidies to HEIs operating grants, payment of
    academic staff salaries
  • Tax benefits tax write-offs, tax credits, tax
    holidays, customs/ duties/VAT exemptions
  • Competitive research funding
  • Capital funding for infrastructure development
  • Free land or land at discounted prices
  • Soft loans
  • Capacity-building/staff training
  • Indirect Assistance
  • Scholarships for students at private HEIs
  • Scholarships for academic staff at private HEIs
  • Student loans for tuition fees and living costs
    for students at private HEIs
  • Student living allowances for students at private
    HEIs

11
Public Funding of Private HE
  • Government involvement in education often
    justified on two grounds
  • HE generates externalities (benefits that
    extend beyond those accruing to the person
    undertaking the education)
  • credit market imperfections (students cannot
    borrow to finance their education)
  • Neither of these justifies government provision
    of HE only government funding of HE
  • No public policy reason for exclusively public
    provision of HE or for providing public subsidies
    exclusively to public sector HEIs
  • Distinction between financing and provision is
    key to moving beyond traditional public
    finance/public delivery model

12
Mechanisms for Allocating Funds to Private HEIs
for Teaching and Learning Activities, Various
Countries
Source OECD
13
Financing versus Provision
14
Case Study Private HE Funding, New Zealand
  • Private sector represents about 15 of
    enrollments in private HE in New Zealand bulk
    of provision is at diploma/certificate, not
    degree, level
  • Assistance to private HE sector includes
    subsidies, as well as student eligibility for
    loans and allowances
  • Policy during 1990s encouraged private sector
    growth tuition subsidies for private sector,
    eligibility for student loans/allowances, quality
    assurance, qualifications framework
  • Some policy backsliding post-1999 tuition fee
    caps, per-student funding cuts, restrictions on
    access to student support, but level of
    assistance still high

15
Private HE Sector Growth, New Zealand1991-2005
16
Case Study HE Reform, Pakistan
  • Broad HE reform program since 2002
  • Program has included a number of reforms aimed at
    increasing the extent and quality of private HE
  • QA system covering both public and private
    institutions
  • Scholarships for students and staff in private
    sector
  • Incentives for private HEIs free or discounted
    land, establishment and research grants, digital
    library access, foreign faculty
  • Information to students rankings, advertising,
    etc
  • Inclusion of private sector in national policy
    discussions
  • Incentives limited to private HEIs that are
    not-for-profit and meet various infrastructure
    and staffing quality
  • Private sector 23 of enrollments in Pakistan

17
Case Study Pakistan HE Reforms (Contd)
  • Private HEIs are eligible to receive some
    government funding
  • up to 50 funding for development projects, 50
    matching grants for digital library, 50 matching
    grants for hiring foreign faculty, 100
    government funding for research support programs
    and training facilities
  • Funding is available to private HEIs that meet
    certain criteria
  • Not-for-profit, 70 of courses taught by
    full-time faculty, own campus, proper governance
    structure, established accounting/audit
    procedures, needs-blind admission policy, meet
    Cabinet establishment criteria
  • Reformed establishment criteria for private HEIs
  • Reduced land requirement, relaxed trust fund
    requirement/investment rules
  • Indirect assistance also available to private
    HEIs
  • PhD scholarship program, undergraduate
    needs-based scholarship program

18
Case Study ProUni Program, Brazil
  • Brazil HE is dominated by the private sector
  • In 2005, Brazil introduced the University for All
    (ProUni) program, aimed at promoting HE access
    for disadvantaged students
  • Key features of the ProUni program
  • Participation by private universities is
    voluntary
  • Participating universities must provide
    scholarships to approximately 10 of paying
    students (set by law)
  • Participating universities are exempt from
    federal taxes
  • Scholarships must be offered to students who
    attended public schools or private schools with a
    full scholarship
  • More than 120,000 scholarships awarded at 1,200
    participating universities in 2005

19
Case Study Financial Aid to Private For-profit
HEIs, USA
  • In 1996, the definition of HE in the USA was
    changed to include private for-profit HEIs
  • Students at private for-profit HEIs became
    eligible for Title IV funding the same
    government-sponsored financial aid available to
    students in public and private non-profit HEIs
  • To be eligible for Title IV financial aid,
    private for-profit HEIs had to meet the following
    criteria
  • Offer an Associates degree or higher
  • Accredited by a body recognized by the U.S.
    Department of Education (DOE)
  • Been in business for at least two years
  • Sign a working agreement with DOE

20
Funding of Private Higher Education
  • Funding of private HE sector can lead to
    increased private investment in HE, increased
    access, greater equity and higher quality
    provision in the HE sector
  • Range of different forms of assistance possible
    from free land to operational subsidies
  • Funding of private HE sector heightens need for
    effective regulatory framework
  • Do not regulate tuition fees of private HEIs
  • Safeguard HEI operational autonomy
  • Well informed student population
  • Strong QA framework for private and public HEIs
  • Clear, objective and efficient HEI establishment
    criteria/process

21
Funding of Private Higher Education (Contd)
  • OECD (2008) has argued that governments should
    publicly subsidize tertiary education studies
    offered by private institutions
  • Small policy changes can have a big impact on
    growth in the private HE sector. Examples
  • FEE-HELP in Australia approved private
    providers grew by 14 in 2007, the first year in
    which private providers were eligible for
    FEE-HELP loan system
  • Financial Aid Reform in 1996 enrollments in
    private for-profit HEIs grew by 128 between 1990
    and 2000
  • HE reforms in New Zealand enrollments grew by
    around 2.5 times between 1997 and 2003

22
Funding of Private Higher Education (Contd)
  • But potential downsides to private sector
    assistance excessive regulation of private
    HEIs, quality concerns, fraud/corruption,
    politicization of private HEIs
  • Other concerns include risk of policy reversal
    due to
  • Change in political/policy environment (eg.
    China, New Zealand)
  • Policy contagion abrupt reversal of policy
    for entire sector due to actions of a few private
    providers
  • Institutional dependency on government funding
    a further concern
  • Risks are heightened by the fact that private
    sector is new in many countries supports need
    for good regulatory framework

23
It doesnt matter if a cat is black or white, as
long as it catches mice. - Deng Xiaoping
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