This paper empirically tests the extent to which public universities in the United States are potentially mismanaged. The focus rests with university managerial employment decisions regarding the continuing substitution of less costly non-tenure track teaching faculty for tenured and tenure track faculty and the extent to which those decisions affect student graduation success. Panel data covering ten academic years, 2004-05 through 2013-14 are employed using ordinary least squares and stochastic frontier analysis specifications. The latter provides tests of the inefficiency effects of managerial employment decisions and academic year estimates of technical efficiency. In both cases, the results provide statistically strong evidence that te...
With decreases in funding support, U.S. public universities have increasingly substituted less costl...
Academic tenure in higher education is at once a highly coveted status and a source of controversy. ...
We study the relationship between academic tenure, executive compensation, and performance in not-fo...
This paper empirically tests the extent to which public universities in the United States are potent...
This paper empirically tests the extent to which public universities in the United States are potent...
This paper empirically tests the extent to which public universities in the United States are potent...
This paper empirically tests the extent to which public universities in the United States are potent...
This paper empirically tests the extent to which public universities in the United States are potent...
The primary objective of this paper is to determine whether tenure in comparison to non-tenure facul...
The primary objective of this paper is to determine whether tenure in comparison to non-tenure facul...
The primary objective of this paper is to determine whether tenure in comparison to non-tenure facul...
With decreases in funding support, U.S. public universities have increasingly substituted less costl...
With decreases in funding support, U.S. public universities have increasingly substituted less costl...
With decreases in funding support, U.S. public universities have increasingly substituted less costl...
With decreases in funding support, U.S. public universities have increasingly substituted less costl...
With decreases in funding support, U.S. public universities have increasingly substituted less costl...
Academic tenure in higher education is at once a highly coveted status and a source of controversy. ...
We study the relationship between academic tenure, executive compensation, and performance in not-fo...
This paper empirically tests the extent to which public universities in the United States are potent...
This paper empirically tests the extent to which public universities in the United States are potent...
This paper empirically tests the extent to which public universities in the United States are potent...
This paper empirically tests the extent to which public universities in the United States are potent...
This paper empirically tests the extent to which public universities in the United States are potent...
The primary objective of this paper is to determine whether tenure in comparison to non-tenure facul...
The primary objective of this paper is to determine whether tenure in comparison to non-tenure facul...
The primary objective of this paper is to determine whether tenure in comparison to non-tenure facul...
With decreases in funding support, U.S. public universities have increasingly substituted less costl...
With decreases in funding support, U.S. public universities have increasingly substituted less costl...
With decreases in funding support, U.S. public universities have increasingly substituted less costl...
With decreases in funding support, U.S. public universities have increasingly substituted less costl...
With decreases in funding support, U.S. public universities have increasingly substituted less costl...
Academic tenure in higher education is at once a highly coveted status and a source of controversy. ...
We study the relationship between academic tenure, executive compensation, and performance in not-fo...