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Collective Choice in Education M.J. Bowman

Collective Choice in Education By M.J. Bowman

Collective Choice in Education by M.J. Bowman


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Summary

The persistently increasing scale and complexity of government, of quasi public organizations, and of private organizations pose many problems in the economics of collective choice.

Collective Choice in Education Summary

Collective Choice in Education by M.J. Bowman

The persistently increasing scale and complexity of government, of quasi public organizations, and of private organizations pose many problems in the economics of collective choice. Moreover, education as a quasi-public good has drawn ever more heavily on public budgets. Yet economic research into collective behavior with respect to education has been sparse (with the partial exception of recent work on teacher unions). In view of these trends, it was decided that the third conference under the Ford-sponsored UK. jUS. Pro gramme in the Economics of Education should make the high-risk effort of encouraging and bringing together studies relating to collective choice in education, with some emphasis on studies in educational finance. The con ference exploited opportunities for an exchange of ideas between economists in the United Kingdom and in the United States; there were special gains that could come from such an interchange. British and American economists do share a common inheritance that goes back to Benthamite utilitarianism and a common training in neo-classical economic theory even when one or both of these is challenged (which happens, of course, on both sides of the Atlantic). They share also a culture of political democracy despite important dissimilar ities in governmental structures and institutions. These commonalities and contrasts facilitate comparative testing of analyses developed in either setting.

Table of Contents

I: Central and Local Roles in Educational Provision.- 1. California School Finance: The 1970s Decade.- 2. The Post-Proposition 13 Environment in California and Its Consequences for Education.- 3. Local Authority Education Expenditure in England and Wales: Why Standards Differ and the Impact of Government Grants.- Commentaries: Douglas M. Windham.- Donald W. Verry.- II: Financing Formal Education: Equity, Efficiency and the Institutional Context.- 1. On Setting the Agenda for Pennsylvania School Finance Reform: An Exercise in Giving Policy Advice.- Commentaries: J.A. Mirrlees.- Daniel McFadden.- 2. Imperfect Capital Markets and the Public Provision of Education.- Commentaries: C.A. Pissarides.- J.A. Mirrlees.- 3. An Equity Perspective on Community College Finance.- Commentary: Siv Gustafsson.- III: Perspectives on Recurrent Education.- 1. The Finance of Recurrent Education: Some Theoretical Considerations.- 2. The Role of the State in Financing Recurrent Education: Lessons from European Experience.- Commentaries: Mark Blaug.- E.G. West.- IV: 'Clubs', Negotiations, and Decision Processes.- 1. The University Department as a Non-profit Labor Cooperative.- Commentary: Laurie Hunter.- 2. Extra-governmental Powers in Public Schooling: The Unions and the Courts.- Commentaries: William L. Boyd.- Ronald G. Ehrenberg.- Rejoinder: E.G. West and R.J. Staaf.

Additional information

NPB9780898380910
9780898380910
089838091X
Collective Choice in Education by M.J. Bowman
New
Hardback
Kluwer Academic Publishers
1982-02-28
272
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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