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  Current issue: Issue 69, January 2012

 
  Editors' Introduction

 
  Finance and employment*
Marco Pagano, Giovanni Pica
 
  Foreign banks and foreign currency lending in emerging Europe
Martin Brown, Ralph De Haas
 
  The international experience of minimum wages in an economic downturn*
Peter Dolton, Chiara Rosazza Bondibene
 
  Educational achievement of second-generation immigrants: an international comparison*
Christian Dustmann, Tommaso Frattini, Gianandrea Lanzara
 
  Erratum to: 'Assessing the fiscal stance in the European Union and the United States, 1970–2011'
Vito Polito, Michael Wickens
 

 


Free article of the month


The governance and performance of universities: evidence from Europe and the US (Issue 61, January 2010)
by Philippe Aghion, Mathias Dewatripont, Caroline Hoxby, Andreu Mas-Colell, André Sapir

We test the hypothesis that universities are more productive when they are both more autonomous and face more competition. Using survey data, we construct indices of university autonomy and competition for both Europe and the United States. We show that there are strong positive correlations between these indices and multiple measures of university output. To obtain causal evidence, we investigate exogenous shocks to US universities' expenditures over three decades. These shocks arise through the political appointment process, which we use to generate instrumental variables. We find that an exogenous increase in a university's expenditure generates more output, measured by either patents or publications, if the university is more autonomous and faces more competition. Exploiting variation over time in the 'stakes' of competitions for US federal research grants, we also find that universities generate more output for a given expenditure when research competitions are high stakes. We draw lessons, arguing that European universities could benefit from a combination of greater autonomy and greater accountability. Greater accountability might come through increased reliance on competitive grants, enhanced competition for students and faculty (promoted by reforms that increase mobility), and yardstick competitions (which often take the form of assessment exercises).

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