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Birdsall, Nancy; Orivel, Francois – Education Economics, 1996
Assesses the effect of school fees on primary school attendance, using household and school survey data from rural Mali. Estimates elasticity of demand regarding fees and compares it with effects of distance and quality on enrollment. User fees can provide a partial solution to the quality/enrollment problem, but cannot solve the distance problem.…
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Economic Factors, Educational Demand, Elementary Education
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Tao, Hung-Lin – Education Economics, 2006
This study proposes a model to estimate the demand for higher education. The present model is characterized by an ability-based distribution of high school graduates who choose between entering the labor market and beginning post-secondary schooling. In addition to estimating the demand for higher education, this model also derives a test of the…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Labor Market, High School Graduates, Human Capital
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Koshal, Rajindar K.; And Others – Education Economics, 1994
Builds and estimates a model that explains educational supply and demand behavior at PhD-granting institutions in the United States. The statistical analysis based on 1988-89 data suggests that student quantity, educational costs, average SAT score, class size, percentage of faculty with a PhD, graduation rate, ranking, and existence of a medical…
Descriptors: Class Size, Costs, Doctoral Programs, Educational Demand
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Hough, J. R. – Education Economics, 1994
Educational cost-benefit analysis, as practiced in both industrialized and developing nations, has been much criticized. Manpower planning, the principal alternative, has received even harsher criticism. The two approaches should be combined in empirically based projects that study recent graduates and chart their subsequent employment progress.…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Cost Effectiveness, Developed Nations, Developing Nations