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The Mobility of Students and the Highly Skilled: Implications for Education Financing and Economic Policy (CESifo Seminar)

The Mobility of Students and the Highly Skilled: Implications for Education Financing and Economic Policy (CESifo Seminar)

Current price: $9.99
Publication Date: December 5th, 2014
Publisher:
MIT Press
ISBN:
9780262028172
Pages:
360
Special Order - Subject to Availability

Description

Analyses of the interrelated mobility of students and the highly skilled that consider its implications for fiscal policy, higher education financing, and economic development.

The mobility of students in developed countries has dramatically increased over the last fifty years. Students do not necessarily remain in their countries of origin for higher education and work; they might be born in one country, attend university in a second, and find employment in a third. In this book, contributors from Europe, North America, and Australia examine the interrelated mobility of university students and the highly skilled, and its consequences--in the country of origin, in the host country during studies, and in the work destination country--for fiscal policies, the financing of higher education, and economic growth.

Taking a variety of approaches, including formal modeling and econometric analysis, the contributors first examine evidence of the interrelationship between the mobility of students and graduates, especially researchers; investigate free-riding problems associated with mobility, including the provision and funding of public higher education; and address the effects of education policy on human capital accumulation and economic development, offering recommendations for well-designed policies in the presence of migration of talents.

Contributors
Nicholas Barr, Elena Del Rey, Susana Elena-P rez, Gabriel J. Felbermayr, Ana Fernandez-Zubieta, Luisa Gagliardi, Marcel G rard, Alexander Haupt, Tim Krieger, Thomas Lange, Elisabetta Marinelli, Richard Murphy, Mar a Racionero, Isabella Reczkowski, Silke Uebelmesser, Linda van Bouwel, Reinhilde Veugelers, David E. Wildasin

About the Author

Marcel Gerard is Professor of Economics and Taxation at the Louvain School of Management and the Institute for European Studies at the University of Louvain. Silke Uebelmesser is Professor of Finance at the University of Jena. Gerard and Uebelmesser are both Research Professors at the Ifo Institute for Economic Research.