The rapid growth of private higher education in response to high demand is a recent phenomenon in most European countries. This paper provides a theoretical model of the higher education market in which a public and a private university compete for students in the presence of borrowing constraints. We find that there exists a unique equilibrium in which the public institution is of higher quality than the private institution. This result supports the observation across many European countries that public universities have usually higher quality and admission standards than their private competitors
This paper proposes a competition model in which universities freely fix their tuition fees in a set...
Many leaders of public research universities worry about falling behind private research universitie...
This paper concentrates on universities strategies for admitting students and the rate at which priv...
The rapid growth of private higher education in response to high demand is a recent phenomenon in mo...
The rapid growth of private higher education in response to high demand is a recent phenomenon in mo...
The rapid growth of private higher education in response to high demand is a recent phenomenon in mo...
In this paper we investigate the optimal choice of prices and/or exams by universities in the presen...
In this paper we investigate the optimal choice of prices and/or exams by universities in the presen...
We investigate the reasons why universities use different combinations of fees and exams to guide ad...
We investigate the reasons why universities use different combinations of fees and exams to guide ad...
This paper focuses on the question whether students ’ expectations and perceptions of service qualit...
A simple Tiebout model is presented where states provide university education to both immobile and m...
Private colleges dominate the higher education market in some countries but not in others. We argue ...
We consider an environment where two education institutions compete by selecting the proportion of ...
This paper compares university competition through fees (as in Anglo-Saxon countries, following Bert...
This paper proposes a competition model in which universities freely fix their tuition fees in a set...
Many leaders of public research universities worry about falling behind private research universitie...
This paper concentrates on universities strategies for admitting students and the rate at which priv...
The rapid growth of private higher education in response to high demand is a recent phenomenon in mo...
The rapid growth of private higher education in response to high demand is a recent phenomenon in mo...
The rapid growth of private higher education in response to high demand is a recent phenomenon in mo...
In this paper we investigate the optimal choice of prices and/or exams by universities in the presen...
In this paper we investigate the optimal choice of prices and/or exams by universities in the presen...
We investigate the reasons why universities use different combinations of fees and exams to guide ad...
We investigate the reasons why universities use different combinations of fees and exams to guide ad...
This paper focuses on the question whether students ’ expectations and perceptions of service qualit...
A simple Tiebout model is presented where states provide university education to both immobile and m...
Private colleges dominate the higher education market in some countries but not in others. We argue ...
We consider an environment where two education institutions compete by selecting the proportion of ...
This paper compares university competition through fees (as in Anglo-Saxon countries, following Bert...
This paper proposes a competition model in which universities freely fix their tuition fees in a set...
Many leaders of public research universities worry about falling behind private research universitie...
This paper concentrates on universities strategies for admitting students and the rate at which priv...