Zum Hauptinhalt springen

Guide to reform of higher education: a European perspective ; ‘The efficiency of Australian universities: a data envelopment analysis’ ; ‘Why do new technologies complement skills? Directed technical change and wage inequality’ ; ‘Technical change, inequality, and the labor market’ ; ‘Higher education as a filter’ ; ‘A review of estimates of the schooling/earnings relationship with tests for publication bias’ ; ‘Computing inequality: have computers changed the wage structure?’ ; ‘Alternative funding resources for higher education’ ; ‘The macroeconomics of unbalanced growth: the anatomy of urban crisis’ ; ‘The role of human capital in economic development. evidence from aggregate cross-country data’ ; ‘Workings of a city: location, education, and production’ ; ‘Human capital, inequality, and growth: a local perspective’ ; ‘Heterogeneity, stratification, and growth: macroeconomic implications of community structure and school finance’ ; ‘Foreign competition, market power and wage inequality’ ; ‘How much do immigration and trade affect labour market outcomes?’ ; ‘Redistribution and education subsidies are Siamese twins’ ; ‘The dynamics of educational attainment for blacks, hispanics, and whites’ ; ‘Estimation of educational borrowing constraints using returns to schooling’ ; ‘The evidence on credit constraints in post-secondary schooling’ ; ‘Conceptual issues and the Australian experience with income contingent charges for higher education’ ; ‘Does European unemployment prop up American wages? National labour markets and global trade’ ; NBER Macroeconomic Annual ; ‘Optimal taxation and public production I: production efficiency’ ; ‘Labor market institutions and the distribution of wages’ ; ‘Spillovers, stratification, and inequality’ ; ‘Taxation, human capital and uncertainty’ ; Economist, The ; ‘Competition between private and public schools, vouchers, and peer group effects’ ; ‘College scholarship rules and private savings’ ; ‘To each according to . . . ? Markets, tournaments, and the matching problem with borrowing constraints’ ; ‘Public education and income distribution: a quantitative evaluation of education finance reform’ ; ‘Not-for-profit provision of public services’ ; ‘Efficiency and equity effects of subsidies to higher education’ ; ‘Efficiency in the provision of university teaching and research: an empirical analysis of UK universities’ ; ‘The returns to education: microeconomics’ ; ‘Human capital policy’ ; Policies to Promote Human Capital Formation ; ‘Explaining rising wage inequality: explorations with a dynamic general equilibrium model of labour earnings with heterogeneous agents’ ; ‘Post-secondary fees and the decision to attend a university or a community college’ ; ‘Stochastic frontier estimation of a CES cost function: the case of higher education in Britain’ ; ‘The lost race between schooling and technology’ ; ‘College entry by blacks since 1970: The role of college costs, family background and the returns to education’ ; ‘Changes in relative wages, 1963–1987: supply and demand factors’ ; ‘Ideas vs. rival human capital: industry evidence of growth models’ ; ‘Education for growth: why and for whom?’ ; ‘Capital-skill complementarity: a macro-economic analysis’ ; ‘Human satisfaction and public policy’ ; ‘Wage inequality in the U.S. during the 1980s: rising dispersion or falling minimum wage?’ ; ‘Student price response in higher education: The student demand studies’ ; ‘Educational subsidies when relative income matters’ ; ‘On the mechanics of economic development’ ; ‘A contribution to the empirics of economic growth’ ; ‘The allocation of talent: implications for growth’ ; ‘The skill-premium, technological change and appropriability’ ; ‘On tuition and the costs of higher education: prolegomena to a conceptual framework’ ; ‘Some problems in the use of income contingent loans for the finance of education’ ; ‘A further augmentation of the Solow Model and the empirics of economic growth for OECD countries’ ; ‘An economic analysis of student financial aid schemes’ ; ‘Explaining international differences in male wage inequality by differences in demand and supply of skill’ ; ‘An empirical analysis of the risk properties of human capital returns’ ; ‘Schooling, family background, and adoption: does family income matter’ ; Economic Journal ; ‘Endogenous technological change’ ; ‘The economics of superstars’ ; ‘Equilibrium in competitive insurance markets: an essay on the economics of imperfect information’ ; ‘The analytics of pricing of higher education and other services in which the customers are inputs’ ; ‘What we know about the efficiency of higher education institutions’ ; ‘Does parents’ money matter?’ ; ‘The returns to education: macroeconomics’ ; ‘Job market signalling’ ; ‘The theory of “screening”, education, and the distribution of income’ ; ‘Credit rationing in markets with imperfect information’ ; ‘On limiting the domain of inequality’ ; ‘Labour markets and economic growth’ ; ‘Subsidies, hierarchy and peers: the awkward economics of higher education’ ; ‘Human capital investment and economic growth: exploring cross-country evidence’

Jacobs, Bas ; Frederick van der Ploeg
academicJournal

Titel:
Guide to reform of higher education: a European perspective ; ‘The efficiency of Australian universities: a data envelopment analysis’ ; ‘Why do new technologies complement skills? Directed technical change and wage inequality’ ; ‘Technical change, inequality, and the labor market’ ; ‘Higher education as a filter’ ; ‘A review of estimates of the schooling/earnings relationship with tests for publication bias’ ; ‘Computing inequality: have computers changed the wage structure?’ ; ‘Alternative funding resources for higher education’ ; ‘The macroeconomics of unbalanced growth: the anatomy of urban crisis’ ; ‘The role of human capital in economic development. evidence from aggregate cross-country data’ ; ‘Workings of a city: location, education, and production’ ; ‘Human capital, inequality, and growth: a local perspective’ ; ‘Heterogeneity, stratification, and growth: macroeconomic implications of community structure and school finance’ ; ‘Foreign competition, market power and wage inequality’ ; ‘How much do immigration and trade affect labour market outcomes?’ ; ‘Redistribution and education subsidies are Siamese twins’ ; ‘The dynamics of educational attainment for blacks, hispanics, and whites’ ; ‘Estimation of educational borrowing constraints using returns to schooling’ ; ‘The evidence on credit constraints in post-secondary schooling’ ; ‘Conceptual issues and the Australian experience with income contingent charges for higher education’ ; ‘Does European unemployment prop up American wages? National labour markets and global trade’ ; NBER Macroeconomic Annual ; ‘Optimal taxation and public production I: production efficiency’ ; ‘Labor market institutions and the distribution of wages’ ; ‘Spillovers, stratification, and inequality’ ; ‘Taxation, human capital and uncertainty’ ; Economist, The ; ‘Competition between private and public schools, vouchers, and peer group effects’ ; ‘College scholarship rules and private savings’ ; ‘To each according to . . . ? Markets, tournaments, and the matching problem with borrowing constraints’ ; ‘Public education and income distribution: a quantitative evaluation of education finance reform’ ; ‘Not-for-profit provision of public services’ ; ‘Efficiency and equity effects of subsidies to higher education’ ; ‘Efficiency in the provision of university teaching and research: an empirical analysis of UK universities’ ; ‘The returns to education: microeconomics’ ; ‘Human capital policy’ ; Policies to Promote Human Capital Formation ; ‘Explaining rising wage inequality: explorations with a dynamic general equilibrium model of labour earnings with heterogeneous agents’ ; ‘Post-secondary fees and the decision to attend a university or a community college’ ; ‘Stochastic frontier estimation of a CES cost function: the case of higher education in Britain’ ; ‘The lost race between schooling and technology’ ; ‘College entry by blacks since 1970: The role of college costs, family background and the returns to education’ ; ‘Changes in relative wages, 1963–1987: supply and demand factors’ ; ‘Ideas vs. rival human capital: industry evidence of growth models’ ; ‘Education for growth: why and for whom?’ ; ‘Capital-skill complementarity: a macro-economic analysis’ ; ‘Human satisfaction and public policy’ ; ‘Wage inequality in the U.S. during the 1980s: rising dispersion or falling minimum wage?’ ; ‘Student price response in higher education: The student demand studies’ ; ‘Educational subsidies when relative income matters’ ; ‘On the mechanics of economic development’ ; ‘A contribution to the empirics of economic growth’ ; ‘The allocation of talent: implications for growth’ ; ‘The skill-premium, technological change and appropriability’ ; ‘On tuition and the costs of higher education: prolegomena to a conceptual framework’ ; ‘Some problems in the use of income contingent loans for the finance of education’ ; ‘A further augmentation of the Solow Model and the empirics of economic growth for OECD countries’ ; ‘An economic analysis of student financial aid schemes’ ; ‘Explaining international differences in male wage inequality by differences in demand and supply of skill’ ; ‘An empirical analysis of the risk properties of human capital returns’ ; ‘Schooling, family background, and adoption: does family income matter’ ; Economic Journal ; ‘Endogenous technological change’ ; ‘The economics of superstars’ ; ‘Equilibrium in competitive insurance markets: an essay on the economics of imperfect information’ ; ‘The analytics of pricing of higher education and other services in which the customers are inputs’ ; ‘What we know about the efficiency of higher education institutions’ ; ‘Does parents’ money matter?’ ; ‘The returns to education: macroeconomics’ ; ‘Job market signalling’ ; ‘The theory of “screening”, education, and the distribution of income’ ; ‘Credit rationing in markets with imperfect information’ ; ‘On limiting the domain of inequality’ ; ‘Labour markets and economic growth’ ; ‘Subsidies, hierarchy and peers: the awkward economics of higher education’ ; ‘Human capital investment and economic growth: exploring cross-country evidence’
Autor/in / Beteiligte Person: Jacobs, Bas ; Frederick van der Ploeg
Link:
Medientyp: academicJournal
DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-0327.2006.00166.x
Sonstiges:
  • Nachgewiesen in: BASE
  • Sprachen: unknown
  • Collection: RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
  • Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
  • Language: unknown

Klicken Sie ein Format an und speichern Sie dann die Daten oder geben Sie eine Empfänger-Adresse ein und lassen Sie sich per Email zusenden.

oder
oder

Wählen Sie das für Sie passende Zitationsformat und kopieren Sie es dann in die Zwischenablage, lassen es sich per Mail zusenden oder speichern es als PDF-Datei.

oder
oder

Bitte prüfen Sie, ob die Zitation formal korrekt ist, bevor Sie sie in einer Arbeit verwenden. Benutzen Sie gegebenenfalls den "Exportieren"-Dialog, wenn Sie ein Literaturverwaltungsprogramm verwenden und die Zitat-Angaben selbst formatieren wollen.

xs 0 - 576
sm 576 - 768
md 768 - 992
lg 992 - 1200
xl 1200 - 1366
xxl 1366 -