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Rettore, Enrico; Rocco, Lorenzo; Dal Maso, Carlo – Education Economics, 2018
We evaluate two reforms that modified the procedures of recruitment and promotion in Italian academia to balance the preeminent role of the recruiting school and to counter nepotism. We theoretically derive the decision rule of the evaluation committees and test it against data including information from all selections to associate and full…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Faculty Promotion, Teacher Recruitment
Diebolt, Claude; Hippe, Ralph – Education Economics, 2018
In a recent contribution, Redding and Schott [2003. "Distance, Skill Deepening and Development: Will Peripheral Countries Ever Get Rich?" "Journal of Development Economics": 72 (2): 515-541. doi:10.1016/S0304-3878(03)00118-4] add human capital to a two sector NEG model, highlighting that remoteness represents a penalty that…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Rural Areas, Regression (Statistics), Foreign Countries
Adelman, Melissa; Haimovich, Francisco; Ham, Andres; Vazquez, Emmanuel – Education Economics, 2018
School dropout is a growing concern across Latin America because of its negative social and economic consequences. Identifying who is likely to drop out, and therefore could be targeted for interventions, is a well-studied prediction problem in countries with strong administrative data. In this paper, we use new data in Guatemala and Honduras to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Dropouts, At Risk Students, Identification
Simo Fotso, Arlette; Solaz, Anne; Diene, Mbaye; Tsafack Nanfosso, Roger – Education Economics, 2018
Although most of the world's disabled people live in developing countries, little is known about the consequences of disability in this part of the world. Using the DHS-MICS 2011 data of Cameroon, this paper contributes to the literature by providing new robust estimates of the effect of child disability on education in a developing country…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Human Capital, Children, Disabilities
Jahanshahi, Babak – Education Economics, 2017
This paper aims to demonstrate the importance of controlling for endogenous peer effects in estimating the influence of gender peer effects on educational outcomes. Using Manski's linear-in-means model, this paper illustrates that the estimation of gender peer effects is potentially biased in the presence of endogenous peer effect in education.…
Descriptors: Peer Influence, Gender Differences, Effect Size, Social Influences
Mancebón-Torrubia, María Jesús; Ximénez-de-Embún, Domingo Pérez – Education Economics, 2014
The aim of this paper is to test whether the distribution of students by social, cultural and racial characteristics is homogeneous between Spanish public schools (PS) and publicly subsidised private schools (PSPS) or whether segregation exists between the profile of pupils attending each type of school. The theoretical framework is based on the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Choice, Public Schools, Private Schools
Peer reviewedChang, Hui S.; Hsing, Yu – Education Economics, 1996
Uses time-series analysis to study effects of changes in tuition and other factors on enrollment at U.S. private colleges and universities. Argues that enrollment demand function should be expressed in a dynamic model. Actual enrollment adjusts to the desired enrollment very slowly; tuition and other related costs significantly affect enrollment…
Descriptors: Educational Demand, Enrollment Trends, Higher Education, Influences
Peer reviewedGlass, J. C.; And Others – Education Economics, 1995
Investigates the cost efficiency of British universities, based on a flexible multiproduct cost-function model. UK universities are characterized by increasing returns to scale. Returns to scale in research are increasing for the top and middle university groups and constant for the bottom group. Increasing returns hold for undergraduate teaching…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Models
Peer reviewedAshworth, John; Papps, Ivy – Education Economics, 1993
Discusses ways to involve parents in a system to measure school quality. Develops a school quality index based on a characteristics approach, rather than market segmentation. The method emphasizes how the "best" school may not be the most popular, since school quality must be isolated from the "price" of attending. A…
Descriptors: Educational Economics, Educational Quality, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedHarding, Ann – Education Economics, 1995
Outlines design issues involved with introducing an income-contingent, college student-loan program and describes the solutions adopted by Australian and New Zealand governments. Uses dynamic microsimulation to simulate the likely future repayment profiles for two Australian ICL schemes and assesses the proportion of total debt repaid. (19…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Loan Repayment
Peer reviewedCorrea, Hector – Education Economics, 1993
Statistical analyses of class size influences on student achievement generally lack a solid theoretical foundation. This paper uses the assumptions and methods of economic theory to study "rational" teacher behavior and prove that increasing class size reduces student achievement. Although the suggested model is elementary and simplified, it lays…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Class Size, Education Work Relationship, Educational Economics
Peer reviewedWorthington, Andrew C. – Education Economics, 2001
Discusses the theory of microeconomic efficiency measurement, including frontier efficiency-measurement techniques; reviews the research measuring inefficiency in education; discusses the determinants of educational efficiency; includes table listing author, methodology, inputs and output, analytical techniques, and main findings for 28 studies of…
Descriptors: Econometrics, Economic Research, Efficiency, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedMancebon, Maria-Jesus; Bandres, Eduardo – Education Economics, 1999
Evaluates efficiency of a sample of Spanish secondary schools, focusing on the measurement model's theoretical specification and the "ex post" analysis of results. Highlights characteristics that differentiate the most efficient schools from the least efficient. Stresses the importance of employing information supplied by both…
Descriptors: Efficiency, Foreign Countries, Institutional Characteristics, Mathematical Models
Peer reviewedKoshal, Rajindar K.; Koshal, Manjulika – Education Economics, 1999
Builds a model explaining the behavior of the supply and demand for education at U.S. liberal arts colleges. A statistical analysis of 1990-91 data for 338 private liberal arts institutions suggests a perfectly competitive market. Student quantity, costs, test scores, class size, and college rankings help explain tuition variations. Contains 27…
Descriptors: Class Size, Costs, Enrollment Trends, Higher Education
Peer reviewedGroot, Wim – Education Economics, 1994
Analyzes the wage effects of different types of education in The Netherlands, using a generalized version of the dummy endogenous variable model and distinguishing among seven types of education: general, agricultural, technical, medical, teacher, economic/administrative, and other education. Findings show that technical education yields lower…
Descriptors: Agricultural Education, Education Work Relationship, Elementary Education, General Education
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