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Published byHilary Richards Modified over 9 years ago
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Financing, resources diversification, private funds Daniel Münich (CERGE-EI, MŠMT)
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TRENDS ~1995 – 1999~2000 – 2006 Slow growth of fundingFast growth of funding Growth of enrolmentRapid growth of enrollment Real per student funds fell 26%Growing real funding per student Spending per student still bellow 1995 CR levels and bellow OECD average Lack of private funding..and efficiency of spending?
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STRENGHTS &CHALENGES StrengthsChallenges Normative funding formulaLack of transparency (should be costs not actual costs) Little emphasis on soc-econ needs Growing real funding per student Weight put also on graduation rateEffective control of budgets and allocations within institutions Development programs (competitive) Over-reliance on public funding Small share of private providers
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OVER-RELIANCE ON PUBLIC FUNDING Private funding from: –Students (domestic, EU, non-EU) –Firms (R&D, innovations, students) –Other Consequences –Constraint of faster growth of the system –Inefficient behavior of students and schools (incentives) …introduce fees and attract private sector
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FRAMEWORKS FOR PRIVATE FEES/TUITION (1) Student loan system, need-based scholarships Differential fees by level of studies –BA, MA, foreign students: pros & cons, Irish experience? Encourage growth of private tertiary sector –make students eligible for public loans/scholarships –real estate endowment (?)
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FRAMEWORKS FOR PRIVATE FEES/TUITION (2) Dual fee system –Charge more market based programs, non-EU students. –Higher tuition subsidies (public) to priority fields Parallel fees structures – not recommended Attract support from industries (students and R&D)
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REFORM OF FINANCING Current funding mechanism –streamlined and transparent –according to normative (current) costs) (?) –according to labor market needs (?) –more responsive to soc-econ needs (?) –consolidate graduate-base component –who will decide? –is there a space left for customer’s preferences and competitive forces? Greater governance power to management –priorities setting (feedback?) –allocation of funds
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INCENTIVES, INFORMATION, COMPETION Information flows SchoolsStudents Government Firms Rules, goals, incentives setting Can we afford relying on smart central planning? Is there a space for disciplining competitive forces?
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