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9 avril 2018

How the decision to triple tuition fees changed history

By Brendan O’Malley. For a good case study in unintended consequences, it would be hard to beat the decision passed after a stormy debate by MPs in December 2010 that went on to imperil not only years of higher education reforms but, inadvertently, the country’s future in the European Union.
Allow me to elaborate. The decision was the vote to pass the fledgling Conservative-Liberal Democrat Coalition government’s bill to allow universities to triple the cap on tuition fees to £9,000 (then US$14,185). More...
9 avril 2018

A spotlight on the major changes and challenges in higher education worldwide

By Brendan O’Malley – Managing Editor. In celebration of our 500th edition of University World News, our correspondents and commentators around the world were asked to focus on the most significant change or challenge facing their country or region in the 10 years since our first edition, or the one that will have the most impact in the 10 years ahead. The outcome is a unique Special Report highlighting some of the major changes and challenges in higher education worldwide.
   Jane Knight says the bright future of higher education internationalisation rests on growing and sustaining collaboration, reciprocity and mutual benefits among nations, and shifting international student recruitment patterns are but one dimension of internationalisation. Also focusing on the global picture, Patrick Blessinger and Hans de Wit hail academic freedom as essential to democracy and highlight some of the new and complex threats to academic freedom, including from nationalist-populist trends, social media and fake news.
   Our Asia editor, Yojana Sharma, explores the likely effect on higher education of dramatically declining birth rates in many countries in East and Southeast Asia, which are set to cause upheaval and fierce competition between universities. In contrast, our Africa editor, Sharon Dell, says rapid population growth in African countries, if the right policies are put in place, has the potential to power the ‘Africa rising’ narrative. And board member of University World News – Africa Goolam Mohamedbhai looks at shifts in the patterns of student mobility in Africa, with China investing more and increased regional mobility.
   Our correspondent in the United States, Mary Beth Marklein, picked rising fees as the most significant challenge faced by US higher education in the past decade, saying “the economics of college is chipping away at the soul of US higher education”. Geoff Maslen, founding editor and Australian correspondent, says the momentous decision by a Labor government in 2008 to lift federal restrictions on university enrolments opened the door to thousands of young Australians who may never have gained entry to a campus, but a federal conservative government is now responding by slashing university funding.
   From Europe, Managing Editor Brendan O’Malley describes how the UK government’s 2010 decision to triple tuition fees could prove politically disastrous and has already played a decisive role in the battle for Brexit. Jane Marshall, our correspondent in France, focuses on the past decade of university reforms under three successive French presidents, while our correspondent in Germany, Michael Gardner, looks at the country’s increasing popularity as a destination for international students which is threatened by the recent rise of the far-right in Germany’s politics, who want to see a U-turn in internationalisation. Our correspondent in Greece, Makki Marseilles, is hopeful that universities can play a role in the recovery of Greece after the imposed austerity programme brought the country to its knees, with traumatic cuts in university funding and academics’ wages. And Jan Petter Myklebust, our Scandinavia correspondent, wonders if ongoing reforms in Nordic countries will change the Nordic model of higher education, which is characterised by high levels of public funding.
   Our South American correspondent, María Elena Hurtado, highlights the free higher education policy introduced in Chile in recent years, which was instigated by massive protests by a vocal student movement. More...
9 avril 2018

Lifelong Learning Platform (LLLP) Annual Conference, 5 - 6 July 2018, Vienna

The Lifelong Learning Platform Annual Conference “Lifelong Learning Culture” will take place on 5-6 July 2018, in Vienna, at the Austrian Economic Chambers (WKO). The event will gather all players in the education and lifelong learning sector: from EU institutions to academics, from international organisations to civil society.

LLLP annual conference 2018

This year’s debate revolves around rethinking education in Europe: from validation and recognition to learning environments, with a holistic approach.
In November 2017, the European Commission launched a new communication for ''Strengthening European Identity through Education and Culture'' ahead of the European Year of Cultural Heritage 2018. Later on, in January 2018, it released a new package for modernising education. This paves the way to a stronger EU-level cooperation in the field of education, training and lifelong learning contributing to a greater social Europe. However, its predominant focus on formal education systems urges LLLP to address the very fundamental issue of current policies lacking to reflect the 21st century learning environments.
The Conference programme includes:
  • Inspirational keynote speeches by high-level personalities including Prof Kim Shinil, former Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Education of the Republic of Korea, and Prof Rineke Smilde, professor of Lifelong Learning in Music at the Prince Claus Conservatoire in Gröningen and at the University of Vienna
  • Thematic talks with Experts
  • Debates in the Cultural Fishbowl
  • Gallery Walk to showcase and share innovative projects and best practices

Do you have a great project to share? Get in contact to save your spot in the Gallery Walk.

Complete programme

Register now and benefit from Early Bird Special Price. More...
9 avril 2018

A new perspective on inequality: The income distribution across advanced countries

https://oecdecoscope.files.wordpress.com/2016/02/cropped-blog-clouds.jpgPosted . What is the relevant perspective for evaluating people’s living standards in advanced countries? According to standard assessments of inequality it is fellow citizens within the country. In a recent paper (Hermansen, 2017), I argue that an interpersonal income distribution across advanced countries can provide a useful complement to comparisons of relative inequality across countries. More...

9 avril 2018

Tunisia: reviving the process of economic convergence for the benefit of all Tunisians

https://oecdecoscope.files.wordpress.com/2016/02/cropped-blog-clouds.jpgPosted . Tunisia is firmly committed to a process of democratisation that needs underpinning by economic reforms in order to guarantee an improved standard of living for all Tunisians. 
There has been a significant increase in citizens’ capacity to participate in political life, and female representation in parliament is higher than in most OECD and emerging countries. More...

9 avril 2018

Statistical Insights: New OECD-WTO data provides coherent and comprehensive view of Global Trade in Services

https://oecdecoscope.files.wordpress.com/2016/02/cropped-blog-clouds.jpgPosted . Services comprise a growing share of international trade. Yet detailed statistics on which countries trade which services with which partners remain patchy. Although worldwide, almost all countries provide an estimate of total trade in services as part of their balance of payments and national accounts, only around 50 OECD and non-OECD countries provide some geographical breakdown in their services statistics. More...

9 avril 2018

To fear or not to fear the future of work? Opportunities, disruptions and policy challenges

https://oecdecoscope.files.wordpress.com/2016/02/cropped-blog-clouds.jpgPosted . Rapid technological change – from digitalisation to artificial intelligence, 3D printing and nanomaterials – is transforming the way goods and services are produced and consumed. It will have profound implications for the dynamics of productivity, jobs, investment and trade over the next 10 to 15 years.  A new OECD report to G-20 Finance Ministers provides an overview of the implications of the changing world of work for achieving inclusive growth. More...

9 avril 2018

Child benefits and female labour supply – the case of Poland

https://oecdecoscope.files.wordpress.com/2016/02/cropped-blog-clouds.jpgPosted . In 2016 the Polish government introduced a large new child benefit, called “Family 500+”, with the aim to increase fertility from a low level and reduce child poverty. The benefit is universal for the second and every further child and means-tested for the first child. It more than doubles fiscal support for families, making Poland one of the top spenders in the EU concerning cash transfers for families. More...

9 avril 2018

Towards an innovative and inclusive economy in Poland

https://oecdecoscope.files.wordpress.com/2016/02/cropped-blog-clouds.jpgPosted . The Polish economy is in a strong position. Economic growth reached 4.6% on average in 2017 and the OECD expects it to continue at around 4% over 2018/19. A good external environment, with a solid recovery in the euro area, and the child benefits introduced in 2016, the “Family 500+” programme, are the main drivers of this strong performance. More...

9 avril 2018

The key to breaking cycle of poverty in Israel lies in education

https://oecdecoscope.files.wordpress.com/2016/02/cropped-blog-clouds.jpgPosted . Inequality and relative poverty in Israel remain high, particularly among Arab-Israelis and Haredim (Ultra-Orthodox). Israel’s social policy follows a “welfare-to-work” approach to tackle poverty in order to avoid measures that may harm work incentives among the Haredi, who value the time dedicated to religious studies, and the Arabs, who have cultural barriers to female employment. The government’s strategy of encouraging employment among previously non-working families has met with substantial success. The Israeli labour market has improved markedly, and more and more Haredim and Israeli-Arabs have been able to find jobs. Moreover, the average real income of poor households has risen by almost 3% annually in the last six years, while the average annual real income of wealthier households has increased by only 2.2%. More...

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