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Major Dimensions of Financing Reforms Financing Reforms for Tertiary Education in the Knowledge Economy Seoul, 6-8 April 2005 n
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outline of the presentation... key financing questions new financing challenges reform and innovation trends
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outline of the presentation... key financing questions
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financing questions n resource mobilization u how much should be spent on tertiary education? (macro-level) u income generation at institutional level u who should pay, and what share? u when and how? u is it affordable? (student aid) n resource utilization u how should public resources be allocated? u how efficient and effective are institutions?
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outline of the presentation... key financing questions new financing challenges
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financing challenges for developing countries n long-standing challenges n emerging challenges
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long-standing challenges n financially sustainable expansion
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enrollment rates by income level (1980-2001)
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enrollment rates by region (1970-2001)
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proportion of private enrollment
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long-standing challenges n financially sustainable expansion n equity in access
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elusive equity Mexico (2005) u only 1% of 15-24 year old from poorest quintile attend tertiary education u 32% from richest quintile n USA: probability to access Ivy League university is u 8.3% for lowest quintile u 50% for richest quintile n France: probability to access Grande Ecole is u 6% for lowest quintile u 15% for middle quintile
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tertiary enrollment per quintile
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inequalities in access and educational resources in USA
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long-standing challenges n financially sustainable expansion n equity in access n internal efficiency
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internal efficiency n proportion of enrolled students who never finish their studies: u 75% in Argentina u 60% in Morocco u 30% in Australia n proportion of students who graduate on time: u 13% in Italy
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long-standing challenges n financially sustainable expansion n equity in access n internal efficiency n quality and relevance
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new challenges n shrinking student population n education and training needs n cost of ICT n increased competition
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client needs n knowledge-driven economic growth (and aging population) requires higher labor productivity, which means in turn u increased demand for skilled workers u changing education and training needs (methodological skills and updating of knowledge) u more diverse clients (lifelong learning perspective)
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Changes in Job Task-Skill Demands (USA, 1960-1998 Source: Autor, Levy, and Murnane (2003) “The Skill Content of Recent Technological Change: An Empirical Exploration,” Quarterly Journal of Economics.
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opportunity to tap potential of ICT
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increased competition n public / private n new providers u long distance competition u franchise universities u corporate universities u media companies, libraries, museums & secondary schools u education brokers n alliances and partnerships
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outline of the presentation... key financing questions new financing challenges reform and innovation trends
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funding sources (macro) from public funding to cost sharing
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funding sources (institutional level) from dependence on public funding to diversified funding
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allocation mechanisms (public funding) from direct funding to indirect funding & from untied funding to performance-based funding
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student aid options from mortgage loans for students to income-contingent loans for graduates
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funding sources (macro) from public funding to cost sharing
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who can pay? n the State central / federal government provincial / state gvt municipal gvt n students / families n firms n society (taxes)
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rationale for cost-sharing n private benefits n need for additional revenues n equity concerns n efficiency promotion
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cost-sharing n living expenditures dormitories food transportation n tuition fees
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fees n for everybody / dual track n undergraduate / postgraduate n national policy / individual institutions n special category students (repeaters, mature, part-time, continuing ed, foreign, out of state) n one fee or program-linked? n ceiling / freedom to set
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optimal fees policy n universal n reasonable level (10 to 30%) n associated with student aid n adjusted to cost of living index
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political economy n consultation and consensus building n decentralization / autonomy
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funding sources (institutional level) from dependence on public funding to diversified funding
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allocation mechanisms (public funding) from direct funding to indirect funding & from untied funding to performance-based funding
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direct funding to institutions n set guidelines n negotiated budgets
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let us make a deal...
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direct funding formula funding input-based output-based competitive funding benchmarking funding performance funding matching fund charge back
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indirect funding vouchers scholarships tax credits matching grants student loans human capital contracts
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Allocation Mechanism Teaching Research Living Expenses Service and Cultural Activities Investment Direct Funding Negotiated Budget XXXXX Formula Funding Input-based XXX Performance-based XX Competitive Funding XX X Benchmarking Funding X Performance Funding XX XX Matching Fund X X Charge Back X Indirect Funding Vouchers X Scholarship s X X Tax Credits X X Matching Grants X X Student Loans X X Human Capital Contracts XX
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Allocation Mechanism Public Private Direct Funding Negotiated Budget XX Formula Funding Input-based X Performance-based X Competitive Funding X X Benchmarking Funding Performance Funding X Matching Fund X Charge Back Indirect Funding Vouchers X Scholarship s X x Tax Credits x Matching Grants Student Loans X X X x X XX Human Capital Contracts x x
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student aid options from mortgage loans for students to income-contingent loans for graduates
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conclusion
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themes of the forum n allocation mechanisms at the national level n income generation at the institutional level n student aid mechanisms n measuring performance n buffer bodies
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