Student loans, even income-contingent ones, are not optimal. Potential university students with the appropriate characteristics should be offered a scholarship, dependent on both need and merit. The award of the scholarship should be conditional on the choice of university degree, but students with a natural aptitude for studies that do not hold the prospect of a well paid job should not be pushed towards potentially more lucrative ones. The scheme should be financed by a graduate tax that re-distributes from the better paid to the academically more successful.scholarships, student loans, graduate tax, principal-agent, moral hazard
We consider a society which consists of two sectors, the educational sector and the production secto...
In a period of student loan scandals and U.S. financial market instability impacting on the cost and...
Different arguments exist pro and contra tax-financed subsidies in higher education. It has been arg...
We characterize the set of second-best optimal menusof student-loan contracts in a simple economy wi...
We examine ways of funding higher education, comparing upfront tuition fees with graduate taxes. The...
We explain why means-tested college tuition and means-tested government grants to college students c...
Most industrial countries have traditionally subsidized the provision of higher education. Alternati...
There are many economic and philosophical arguments supporting the introduction of student loans as ...
There are many economic and philosophical arguments supporting the introduction of student loans as ...
Governmental subsidies to higher education raise issues of fairness between families and between gen...
We develop a model of education where individuals face educational risk. Successfully entering the s...
We consider risk-averse individuals who di er in two characteristics { ability to bene t from educat...
We develop a model of education where individuals face educational risk. Successful graduation depen...
Participation in higher education has increased considerably over the last decades. The resulting bu...
There are many economic and philosophical arguments supporting the introduction of student loans as ...
We consider a society which consists of two sectors, the educational sector and the production secto...
In a period of student loan scandals and U.S. financial market instability impacting on the cost and...
Different arguments exist pro and contra tax-financed subsidies in higher education. It has been arg...
We characterize the set of second-best optimal menusof student-loan contracts in a simple economy wi...
We examine ways of funding higher education, comparing upfront tuition fees with graduate taxes. The...
We explain why means-tested college tuition and means-tested government grants to college students c...
Most industrial countries have traditionally subsidized the provision of higher education. Alternati...
There are many economic and philosophical arguments supporting the introduction of student loans as ...
There are many economic and philosophical arguments supporting the introduction of student loans as ...
Governmental subsidies to higher education raise issues of fairness between families and between gen...
We develop a model of education where individuals face educational risk. Successfully entering the s...
We consider risk-averse individuals who di er in two characteristics { ability to bene t from educat...
We develop a model of education where individuals face educational risk. Successful graduation depen...
Participation in higher education has increased considerably over the last decades. The resulting bu...
There are many economic and philosophical arguments supporting the introduction of student loans as ...
We consider a society which consists of two sectors, the educational sector and the production secto...
In a period of student loan scandals and U.S. financial market instability impacting on the cost and...
Different arguments exist pro and contra tax-financed subsidies in higher education. It has been arg...