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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Wright State University Regional Economic Report, Fall 2011, Thomas L. Traynor Oct 2011

Wright State University Regional Economic Report, Fall 2011, Thomas L. Traynor

Economics Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Publicly Vs. Privately Controlled Higher Education Costs: Panel Data Estimates, G. Thomas Sav Aug 2011

Publicly Vs. Privately Controlled Higher Education Costs: Panel Data Estimates, G. Thomas Sav

Economics Faculty Publications

More so now than ever, budgetary problems and widespread reforms are generating questions regarding higher education costs among publicly controlled compared to privately controlled colleges and universities. Past studies have offered scale and scope estimates anchored in 1995 and earlier cross sectional data that could contain omitted variable biased. In contrast, this paper employs panel data spanning the 2005 through 2009 years to estimate a multiproduct cost function and scale and scope economies separately for public and private sector colleges and universities. The two-way fixed effects results indicate the presence of significant institutional and time effects. Overall, the findings suggest …


Wright State University Regional Economic Report, Spring 2011, Thomas L. Traynor Apr 2011

Wright State University Regional Economic Report, Spring 2011, Thomas L. Traynor

Economics Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Cost Efficiencies And Rankings Of Flagship Universities, G. Thomas Sav Jan 2011

Cost Efficiencies And Rankings Of Flagship Universities, G. Thomas Sav

Economics Faculty Publications

Problem Statement:

Each state in the U.S. touts a premier university as the flagship of its publicly funded higher education system. With decreased government budgets and increased interest in public management reforms, these institutions are being pressured to provide evidence of and set examples for ever greater improvements in operating cost efficiencies. The problem, however, is that empirical measures of their efficiencies or inefficiencies can be sensitive and, therefore, vary widely depending upon the underlying model specification.

Approach:

The study used stochastic frontier analysis to estimate university cost inefficiencies over the 2005-09 academic years. Transom and Cobb-Douglas specifications were combined …