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Insights on measuring economic value and impact of higher education outputs for effective resource allocation, ROI evidence, and efficiency evaluation.
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Estimating the economic value of the outputs of higher education institutions ERSA August 2008 Ursula Kelly and Iain McNicoll University of Strathclyde
Impact measurement and metrics • Desire for economic value and impact measures for HEIs (particularly for ‘knowledge transfer’ )driven primarily by government • -For resource allocation • -For evidence of return on investment • -General evaluation of efficiency and effectiveness • -To indicate the economic and social impact of HE • Current measures in use for knowledge transfer are seen as insufficient: • -Because the readily available data encourages a focus on narrow aspects of HEI activity - e.g. patents and licensing, no of ‘spin-off companies’ created • -Because current measures do not capture links between interventions and desired outcomes ( e.g. increase in national competitiveness resulting from funding support for HEI – Business interaction) • -Because they cannot reflect the value of non-market work of HEIs
Towards the estimation of the economic value of the outputs of Scottish higher education institutions • Initial pilot case study work ( supported by Nuffield Foundation) 2004 • Methodology development report for the SFC (Kelly, McNicoll & McLellan 2005 available from: http://www.strath.ac.uk/projects/economicrole ) • ‘Next Steps’ pilot project for the SFC (Kelly,McNicoll & Brooks 2008) applying the methodology to 3 areas of activity: • -cultural outreach • -community outreach, • -public policy advisory work • Aimed to use real HEI data to illustrate how these areas of external engagement can be quantified and estimates of economic value made • Also developed conceptual framework further to identify potential PIs or ’metrics’ for some non-market areas
Terms, Definitions, Concepts • Our approach founded in fundamental principles of applied economics and statistics • Uses core definitional sources (eg on the European System of Accounts(ESA 95) , the SNA etc • We are focussed on the role of the Higher Education Institution(HEI)and the capabilities of the HEInot ‘Higher Education’ in general • We focus on the outputs of HEIs i.e what the HEIs actually produce • Current difficulty with metrics development is a tendency to focus on outcomes • But only metrics based on outputs can give meaningful performance indicators for HEIs
Other factors eg student willingness to attend lecture series Outputs and Outcomes Inputs: e.g. Staff time, IT support, space HEI Activities E.g. organisation of all resources to enable lecture series Mathematics 101to be delivered HEI Outputs e.g. Eight x one hour lectures of Mathematics 101 delivered Outcomes e.g. Student knowledgeable in mathematical principles • Outputs are within the control of the HEI . Their outputs may contribute to outcomes …but outcomes also rely on other factors • Knowledge Transmission may be an output of an HEI • but Knowledge Transfer is an outcome , requiring the • active involvement of other parties and ability to absorb • the knowledge transmitted. Hence an HEI cannot be measured on its success in knowledge transfer as this is beyond its boundaries. Other factors e.g student ability to understand material ( student absorptive capacity)
Estimating economic value of HEI outputs • Definition and Identification of outputs • – what an HEI actually produces • Quantification • Volume terms • - how much of each output does the HEI produce • Value Terms • -the market price of each output • Economic Value = Volume x unit price • ALL HEI outputs are, in principle, quantifiable in natural volume units • But many outputs are non-market
Shadow-Pricing Non-market outputs • HEIs are not unique in producing non-market outputs • Recognised ways exist of imputing a value to non-market outputs ( and are used by the World Bank, UK Treasury Green book etc) • These include finding parallel markets ( ‘free market’ , equivalents), using ‘contingent valuation’- willingness to pay, willingness to accept - ‘hedonic pricing’, ‘Travel cost’ or ‘Time cost’.
Examples of Shadow-Pricing Non-Market HEI Outputs • Parallel markets for: • - Public Policy Advisory Work • - Sports Centre Community Memberships • Time-cost Method for: • - Public Lectures & events open to the public • - Performing Arts Events • - Galleries/Museums/Exhibitions • - Wider Community Use of Library Services
Examples of some valid potential metrics • Public Policy Advisory Outputs • - Number of hours of public policy advisory work delivered per member of staff per annum • Public Lectures and General Events open to the public • - Estimated annual attendance numbers and number of attendee hours spent • Wider Community use of Library Services • - Number of external (i.e non-academic) users of HEI Libraries • Wider use of Institutional information resources and knowledge base • - Annual number of full article downloads from institutional repositories • Wider community use of Sports services • - Number of external (community) user memberships of HEI sports facilities and centres
Some final remarks… • To consider HEI wider contribution to society or to assess its ‘impact’- it is essential to quantify HEI outputs in the first instance • And in principle ALL HEI outputs can be quantified • Without knowledge of HEI outputs no meaningful measures of efficiency (outputs/inputs) can be derived and • the next step development of measures of effectiveness (outcomes/outputs) will remain unattainable