
The global economic crisis has required governments across the globe to reconsider their spending priorities. It is within this demanding economic context that higher education systems have been steadily restructured with in many ways the English model in the vanguard of change. This book focuses in particular upon the policy of removing almost entirely public support for the payment of student fees. This has emerged from a steady process of change, which has broad political support and is underwritten by the idea that higher education is now seen more as a private than a public, good. As this shift has occurred (not a new innovation but rather a return to what once prevailed as more of a market in English higher education) so the relationship between government and the higher education has evolved with the latter now attempting to steer the development of the system through a state-regulated market. The book has a strong comparative dimension that draws upon US higher education to illustrate both the possible advantages and potential hazards to the marketization strategy. It concludes that any such strategy needs to be accompanied by state regulation if it is to function effectively, particularly to stimulate price competition, encourage innovation from new entrants, and provide consumer protection for students paying high fees.
This book investigates how the shift toward a market-based model in higher education necessitates a robust framework of state regulation to function effectively. The authors, David Palfreyman and Ted Tapper, utilize their expertise in higher education policy to analyze the transition from public funding to student-funded models. They argue that as higher education is increasingly treated as a private good, the government must evolve its role from a direct provider to a regulator that ensures market competition and consumer protection.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of higher education policy and the complexities of marketization. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the authors' clear focus on the structural evolution of university governance.
Page Count:
307
Publication Date:
2014-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019178155X
ISBN-13:
9780191781551
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