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Government Intervention

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Title: Government Intervention


1
Government Intervention and Quality of
Universities   Elise S. Brezis
2
  • Introduction
  • In most countries of the Western world, there is
    these last years a will for reforming higher
    education institutions
  • France, Germany, Italy, UK
  • South Korea
  • Lisbon strategy and Bologna Process


3
  • Knowledge and innovation are the engines of
    sustainable growth in Europe today, and
    universities are crucial for achieving the goals
    set out by the European Council. However, there
    are important weaknesses in the performance of
    European higher education institutions compared
    to those of our main competitors, notably the
    USA. Although the average quality of European
    universities is rather good, they are not in a
    position to deliver their full potential to boost
    economic growth, social cohesion and more and
    better jobs. The Commission invites national
    decision makers to set out measures that would
    enable universities to play a full role in the
    Lisbon strategy.Ján Figel, European
    Commissioner for Education, Training, Culture and
    Multilingualism. .

4
  • The reason for this will for reforms is the
    change of the purpose of universities and
    massification.
  • I. Historical Background on purpose of
    universities
  • II, Typology of universities
  • III. Research Methodology

5
  • I.Historical Background
  • From the Middle Age on, universities were part of
    the religious establishment, and their main role
    was to teach liberal arts, philosophy, and
    theology, though some of them became famous for
    specific subjects, such as law in Bologna and
    medicine in Montpellier.
  • Most university students, whose numbers were in
    any case few, were preparing for a career in the
    Church, even after the Reformation.
  • Homogeneity of quality of education (all in
    Latin).
  • During these centuries, the impact of higher
    education on the economy was inexistent. Until
    19th century, the effects of university education
    on innovation are small.

6
  • Dramatic changes took place in the second part of
    20th century
  • First, the role of universities has changed and
    they became of utmost importance for economic
    growth.
  • Second, the quality of education became
    heterogeneous. Indeed, the number of universities
    and colleges in the West rose, and the number of
    students increased even more.
  • Concurrently with this democratization of higher
    education, universities became heterogeneous not
    only in their specialization, but also in their
    quality.
  • Elites universities vs. the rest

7
  • II. Typology of universities
  • Massification and democratization of higher
    education led to a new typology of universities
  • Universities are ranked by their quality.
  • Why does it matter?
  • 1. Signaling
  • 2. Recruitment of elites.
  • While there is a debate if the quality of
    university affects income.
  • There is no doubt that it affects the selection
    of elites

8
  • The selection of elites on the basis of success
    at exams was the fundamental change in the
    recruitment of elites in the second half of the
    20th century.
  • Before this period, education is not important
    for the selection process.
  • After World War II, meritocracy (selecting the
    best by performance in exams) made inroads in
    Western countries.
  • There is democratization of higher education, but
    in most countries, heterogeneity in the level of
    colleges the elites colleges and the rest.
  • In consequence, the elite comes from elite
    universities.

9
  • In France, 50 the business elite comes from
    elites universities (ENA and grandes ecoles)
  • Moreover, 8 of the population supplies 63 of
    the ENA students (or the next generation of
    rulers).
  • Democratization of higher education and
    massification do not enhance social mobility.

10
  • The third change in 20th century
  • With the emergence of this heterogeneity in the
    quality of universities, there is also an
    emergence of a new type of university the
    private universities.
  • While during the 19th and first half of 20th
    century, there are mostly public universities,
    today, the emergence of private universities
    leads to a distinction between private
    universities, with no government intervention,
    and public ones, with government intervention in
    the decision making.

11
  • The purpose of this research is to analyze the
    correlation between these two typologies quality
    and government intervention
  • While in the past, public universities were
    flourishing (the best universities were known to
    be the German ones like Heidelberg and Berlin),
    today the best universities are private.
  • The US private universities are the highest in
    the ranking of universities, and it seems that
    the number of private universities between the
    elite universities increases over time.

12
  • III. Research Methodology
  • The purpose of this paper is to examine the
    relationship between quality and government
    intervention. This research will be divided in
    three parts.
  • The first part of the research analyzes
    government intervention in higher education
  • The second part examines the quality of
    education.
  • The third part will be devoted to analyze the
    interaction between these two elements
    government intervention and quality of
    universities.

13
  • A. Intervention in higher education
  • (1) budget, budget allocation and tuition fees
  • (2) Salaries and promotion of staff
  • (3) Admission policy.
  • In some countries the state takes decisions on
    these three categories. In others, only some of
    these categories are in the hands of the state.
  • I will develop indices of state intervention.

14
  • For each indicator, the highest scoring
    institution is assigned a score of 100, and other
    institutions are calculated as a percentage of
    the top score.
  • Scores for each indicator are weighted to arrive
    at a final overall score for an institution. The
    highest scoring institution is assigned a score
    of 100, and other institutions are calculated as
    a percentage of the top score.

15
  • (2) Salaries and promotion of staff
  • Should government have a say on promotion policy,
    and should universities been given the autonomy
    on salaries?
  • Is there a trade-off between level of wages and
    rapidity of promotion (Ehrenberg et al., 1998)?
  • What are the consequences of having an
    idiosyncratic system on the quality of
    universities at a time of globalization of
    education?
  • I will build an index on government intervention
    in the field of salaries and promotion
    (Ehrenberg, 2002 and King, 2001).

16
  • B. The quality of education
  • 1. Definition of quality is related to the goal
    of education.
  • Different Goals of universities
  • Educated manpower Human capital
  • Broad education
  • Research formation of next generation
  • Signaling/screening.

17
  • 2. Quantification and Indices
  • Publications, citations, awards, Nobel Prize,
    patents. (see Liu, Coupe)
  • Salaries of alumni.
  • SAT scores
  • Expenditures per student, student/faculty ratio,
    libraries..

18
  • C. State intervention and quality of Education
  • The first part of this research is devoted to
    develop some indices of state intervention. Some
    of the indices will be focusing only on one of
    the categories presented above. There will be
    also general indices taking into account the
    three categories with different weights.
  • The second part of the research is devoted to
    examine indices of the quality of education.
  • This third part will examine their correlation.
    We will also check the correlation between
    quality of higher education and economic growth.

19
  • IV. Previous Research on this correlation
  • Psacharopoulos, 2003
  • Correlation of public expenditure/student vs.
    publication/population,
  • Correlation of private share of education vs.
    quality (Nb. universities in top 100
    universities).

20

21
  • Policy Implications
  • Should we privatize universities?
  • Which of the three elements determining
    government intervention is the most important for
    improving the quality of universities?
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