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Gonand, Frederic – OECD Publishing (NJ1), 2007
This paper assesses the impact on economic growth of increased efficiency of public spending in primary and lower-secondary education. Higher efficiency in public spending in schools can bolster growth through two main channels. On the one hand, it can allow a transfer of labour from the public sector to the business sector at unchanged…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Educational Finance, Foreign Countries, Public Sector
Snell, Warren – Journal of Tertiary Educational Administration, 1982
Resource allocation within education systems is approached from the perspective of economic theory and input-output processes. It is suggested that economic concepts of efficiency and productivity focus attention on factors affecting effective use of resources and should be systematically encouraged. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Educational Economics, Efficiency, Input Output Analysis, Outcomes of Education
Lockheed, Marlaine E. – 1988
This paper provides a conceptual framework for addressing the issue of effectiveness and efficiency in education. It considers alternative criteria for identifying efficiency and discusses constraints on improving efficiency. The first section distinguishes efficiency from effectiveness, and also distinguishes "internal" from "external" efficiency…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Educational Economics, Efficiency, Elementary Secondary Education
Hess, Frederick M. – American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 2004
The United States currently spends a good deal more on education per student than most industrialized nations, yet testing shows that achievement has not kept pace with spending. Nevertheless, school administrators continue to press for greater federal spending and claim that reforms cannot be implemented otherwise.
Descriptors: Federal Aid, Expenditure per Student, Correlation, Academic Achievement