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Enrollment expansion and quality differentiation across higher education systems
Institution:1. Ifo Institute, University of Munich and CESifo, Poschingerstr. 5, D-81679, Munich, Germany;2. Univ. Ramon Llull, ESADE Business School and CESifo, Av. del la Torre Blanca 59, E-08172, Sant Cugat, Spain;1. Banque de France, Direction de la Stabilité Financière, Paris, France;2. EconomiX-CNRS, University of Paris Nanterre, France;3. CEPII, Paris, France;1. Department of Finance and Economics, Qatar University, Qatar;2. Department of Economics, University of Miami, USA;3. Department of Economics, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, USA
Abstract:While the impact of a higher college wage premium on enrollment expansion is well understood, the link between university quality differentiation and student outcomes in this context has received less attention. To address this issue, we model different higher education systems. Academic standards decline in a differentiated, U.S.-type education system - as a low-quality segment emerges - but also in a system in which a uniform standard is politically determined, as in most European countries, since the interests of marginal students matter for the chosen standard. In the absence of full information about graduates' skills, employers put more weight on university reputation than on individual human capital signal. Thus, higher differentiation can decrease the effort and skill of medium-ability students. Obtaining the preferred academic standard is particularly important for high-and low-ability students, hence the trend toward more unequal societies raises political support for strongly differentiated systems.
Keywords:Enrollment expansion  Quality differentiation  Higher education systems  I21  I23  I28  J24
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