Combining Market and Bureaucratic Control in Education: an answer to market and bureaucratic failure?
Titel:
Combining Market and Bureaucratic Control in Education: an answer to market and bureaucratic failure?
Auteur:
Vandenberghe, Vincent
Verschenen in:
Comparative education
Paginering:
Jaargang 35 (1999) nr. 3 pagina's 271-282
Jaar:
1999-11-01
Inhoud:
This article focuses on institutional arrangements in education across Western countries. It essentially deals with the recent trend towards extended school choice presumably aimed at creating a competitive environment for schools and teachers. For many years the functioning of educational systems, in particular the way schools were institutionally co-ordinated, was not perceived as fundamental to economic analysis. But more and more economists now believe that the institutional setting in which schools are embedded-their governance structure-is decisive regarding both efficiency and equity. In this respect, it is worth noting that most Western countries rely essentially on bureaucratic control to co-ordinate their educational sector. Yet some of them, such as Belgium, The Netherlands, England and Wales, New Zealand and Sweden incorporate market-oriented mechanisms at the heart of their institutional arrangements. The main focus of this article is to analyse the origins, as well as the economic relevance, of this-in some cases relatively recent-tendency to mix bureaucratic and market approaches to education.