3. Economic Returns to Investing in Higher Education and Their Impact in the BRI C Countries

2021 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
pp. 02023
Author(s):  
Vladislav Bogovin ◽  
Evgeniya Vidishcheva

Innovation activity is central to economic modernization. Despite the fact that Russia possesses serious scientific/technical potential, it has fallen significantly behind industrial countries in getting innovative solutions to an open commercial market. The nation has had difficulties in commercializing innovative output, which has kept it from achieving the economic returns that it deserves. The commercialization of R&D outcomes is indispensable to the strategic development of any organization. The insufficiently effective realization of innovation potential in Russia is largely due to the detachedness of innovation activity in higher education institutions from practice and a lack of interest from business – a key agent of innovation commercialization. The research reported in this paper focuses on the scientific/theoretical and practical/applied foundations of the process of commercializing the outcomes of innovation activity in higher education institutions. It has helped establish and gain an insight into some of the key issues in the area. The paper makes a case for the possibility of enhancing this process via a special model for commercializing the outcomes of innovation activity in higher education institutions.


2019 ◽  
Vol 93 (2) ◽  
pp. 91-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natasha Quadlin

Research shows that college students choose majors for a variety of reasons. Some students are motivated by potential economic returns, others want to take engaging classes, and others still would like opportunities to help people in their jobs. But how do these preferences map onto students’ actual major choices? This question is particularly intriguing in light of gender differences in fields of study, as men and women may take divergent pathways in pursuit of the same outcome. Using data from the Pathways through College Study (N = 2,639), I show that men and women choose very different majors even when they cite the same major preferences—what I call gendered logics of major choice. In addition, I use earnings data from the American Community Survey to assess how these gendered logics of major choice may be associated with broader patterns of earnings inequality. I find that among men and women who have the same major preferences, men’s major choices are tied to significantly higher prospective earnings than women’s major choices. This finding demonstrates that the ways men and women translate their preferences into majors are unequal from an earnings perspective. Implications for research on higher education and gender are discussed.


Author(s):  
Martin Carnoy ◽  
Prashant Loyalka ◽  
Maria Dobryakova ◽  
Rafiq Dossani ◽  
Isak Froumin ◽  
...  

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