The relative efficiency of education and R&D expenditures in the new EU member states

The paper attempts to measure relative efficiency in utilizing public education and R&D expenditures in the new EU member states in comparison to the selected EU (plus Croatia) and OECD countries. As resources allocated to education and R&D sector are significantly limited, a special emphas...

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Main Author: Aleksander Aristovnik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Vilnius Gediminas Technical University 2012-10-01
Series:Journal of Business Economics and Management
Subjects:
R&D
Online Access:https://journals.vgtu.lt/index.php/JBEM/article/view/4430
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spelling doaj-36034968989947af9795e2fab25d33ba2021-07-02T14:19:31ZengVilnius Gediminas Technical UniversityJournal of Business Economics and Management1611-16992029-44332012-10-0113510.3846/16111699.2011.620167The relative efficiency of education and R&D expenditures in the new EU member statesAleksander Aristovnik0Faculty of Administration, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia The paper attempts to measure relative efficiency in utilizing public education and R&D expenditures in the new EU member states in comparison to the selected EU (plus Croatia) and OECD countries. As resources allocated to education and R&D sector are significantly limited, a special emphasis should be given to their efficient use regarding the institutional and legal constraints. By applying non-parametric methodology, i.e. Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA), a relative efficiency is defined as the deviation from the efficiency frontier which represents the maximum output/outcome attainable from each input level. An analysis of (output-oriented) efficiency measures shows that among the new EU member states Hungary, Estonia and Slovenia seem to be good benchmark countries in the field of primary, secondary and tertiary education, respectively. On the other hand, Cyprus and again Hungary dominate in the field of R&D sector, even if for different reasons. The empirical results also suggest that, in general, new EU member states show relatively high efficiency in tertiary education, while lag well behind in the R&D efficiency measures. https://journals.vgtu.lt/index.php/JBEM/article/view/4430public spendingeducationR&Dtechnical effi ciencyDEA analysisnew EU members
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aleksander Aristovnik
spellingShingle Aleksander Aristovnik
The relative efficiency of education and R&D expenditures in the new EU member states
Journal of Business Economics and Management
public spending
education
R&D
technical effi ciency
DEA analysis
new EU members
author_facet Aleksander Aristovnik
author_sort Aleksander Aristovnik
title The relative efficiency of education and R&D expenditures in the new EU member states
title_short The relative efficiency of education and R&D expenditures in the new EU member states
title_full The relative efficiency of education and R&D expenditures in the new EU member states
title_fullStr The relative efficiency of education and R&D expenditures in the new EU member states
title_full_unstemmed The relative efficiency of education and R&D expenditures in the new EU member states
title_sort relative efficiency of education and r&d expenditures in the new eu member states
publisher Vilnius Gediminas Technical University
series Journal of Business Economics and Management
issn 1611-1699
2029-4433
publishDate 2012-10-01
description The paper attempts to measure relative efficiency in utilizing public education and R&D expenditures in the new EU member states in comparison to the selected EU (plus Croatia) and OECD countries. As resources allocated to education and R&D sector are significantly limited, a special emphasis should be given to their efficient use regarding the institutional and legal constraints. By applying non-parametric methodology, i.e. Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA), a relative efficiency is defined as the deviation from the efficiency frontier which represents the maximum output/outcome attainable from each input level. An analysis of (output-oriented) efficiency measures shows that among the new EU member states Hungary, Estonia and Slovenia seem to be good benchmark countries in the field of primary, secondary and tertiary education, respectively. On the other hand, Cyprus and again Hungary dominate in the field of R&D sector, even if for different reasons. The empirical results also suggest that, in general, new EU member states show relatively high efficiency in tertiary education, while lag well behind in the R&D efficiency measures.
topic public spending
education
R&D
technical effi ciency
DEA analysis
new EU members
url https://journals.vgtu.lt/index.php/JBEM/article/view/4430
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