A model is presented where universities competitively supply education to mobile students. Students are subject to a liquidity constraint so that tuition must be paid out of pre-university income. It is shown that student loans provided by home jurisdictions will ensure an efficient quality of higher education if loans do not contain any subsidy. If there is income-related debt relief, however, the equilibrium quality of education is inefficiently low. This is because students reduce their expected future income by attending a university offering low quality, and thereby reduce the amount of debt to be repaid
This paper provides a consistent comparison of general tuition subsidies, need-based student aid, me...
In this paper, we study the higher education financing based on the classical contributory versus se...
This paper provides a consistent comparison of general tuition subsidies, need-based student aid, me...
A simple Tiebout model is presented where states provide university education to both immobile and m...
We use a calibrated macroeconomic model to examine the different effects of university tuition and s...
In a period of student loan scandals and U.S. financial market instability impacting on the cost and...
The rapid worldwide growth in higher education undergraduate enrollments since around 1990 has meant...
There are many economic and philosophical arguments supporting the introduction of student loans as ...
This paper explores the impact of university finance reforms on teaching quality. It is shown that t...
There are many economic and philosophical arguments supporting the introduction of student loans as ...
Governments and universities have trouble reconciling the goal of keeping high-er education widely a...
There are many economic and philosophical arguments supporting the introduction of student loans as ...
This paper analyzes how integrated labor markets affect the financing of higher education. For this,...
The current level and form of subsidization of college education is of-ten rationalized by appeal to...
American students are graduating from college averaging tens of thousands of dollars in debt, leadin...
This paper provides a consistent comparison of general tuition subsidies, need-based student aid, me...
In this paper, we study the higher education financing based on the classical contributory versus se...
This paper provides a consistent comparison of general tuition subsidies, need-based student aid, me...
A simple Tiebout model is presented where states provide university education to both immobile and m...
We use a calibrated macroeconomic model to examine the different effects of university tuition and s...
In a period of student loan scandals and U.S. financial market instability impacting on the cost and...
The rapid worldwide growth in higher education undergraduate enrollments since around 1990 has meant...
There are many economic and philosophical arguments supporting the introduction of student loans as ...
This paper explores the impact of university finance reforms on teaching quality. It is shown that t...
There are many economic and philosophical arguments supporting the introduction of student loans as ...
Governments and universities have trouble reconciling the goal of keeping high-er education widely a...
There are many economic and philosophical arguments supporting the introduction of student loans as ...
This paper analyzes how integrated labor markets affect the financing of higher education. For this,...
The current level and form of subsidization of college education is of-ten rationalized by appeal to...
American students are graduating from college averaging tens of thousands of dollars in debt, leadin...
This paper provides a consistent comparison of general tuition subsidies, need-based student aid, me...
In this paper, we study the higher education financing based on the classical contributory versus se...
This paper provides a consistent comparison of general tuition subsidies, need-based student aid, me...