Published Date
2006
Editors
Eric A. Hanushek
Finis Welch
Publication
Amsterdam: North Holland
Pages
742 pages
Type
There are many ways to date the development of the economics of education. In the 17th Century, Sir William Petty began writing about the valuation of lives in terms of the productive skills of individuals – a precursor of human capital considerations. Adam Smith followed a century later with direct consideration of the organization and finance of education. Yet, the more natural dating is much more recent with the development and legitimization of the study of human capital lead by Gary Becker, Jacob Mincer, and T.W. Schultz. These initial forays have, however, been followed by a torrent of recent work.
VOLUME 2
Chapter 13
Using Wages to Infer School Quality
Robert Speakman and Finis Welch
Chapter 14
School Resources
Eric A. Hanushek
Chapter 15
Drinking from the Fountain of Knowledge: Student Incentive to Study and Learn –
Externalities, Information Problems and Peer Pressure
John Bishop
Chapter 16
Schools, Teachers, and Education Outcomes in Developing Countries
Paul Glewwe and Michael Kremer
Chapter 17
Has School Desegregation Improved Academic and Economic Outcomes for Blacks?
Steven Rivkin and Finis Welch
Chapter 18
Teacher Quality
Eric A. Hanushek and Steven G. Rivkin
Chapter 19
Teacher Supply
Peter J. Dolton
Chapter 20
Pre-School, Day Care, and After School Care: Who’s Minding the Kids?
David Blau and Janet Currie
Chapter 21
The Courts and Public School Finance: Judge-Made Centralization and Economic Research
William A. Fischel
Chapter 22
Income and Peer Quality Sorting in Public and Private Schools
Thomas J. Nechyba
Chapter 23
Public Intervention in Post-Secondary Education
Thomas J. Kane
Chapter 24
US Higher Education Finance
Michael S. McPherson and Morton Owen Schapiro
Chapter 25
Income Contingent Loans for Higher Education: International Reforms
Bruce Chapman