Department of Political Science / School of Economics and Political Science, University of St.Gallen

New paper in Governance

Wonderful news. The paper “High Skills for High Tech:  Higher Education as Industrial Policy” (together with Niccolo Durazzi and Alina Felder-Stindt) has been accepted for publication in Governance. It will be part of a special issue on new industrial policy (edited by Donato Di Carlo, Kathleen McNamara, and Manuela Moschella). Here is the abstract:

How do states create the skills needed for high technology economic activities that hold an increasingly important role in contemporary societies? Examining economic statecraft in the higher education sector, this article shows that the policies employed by governments to expand the supply of high skills vary depending on their economies’ most advanced sectors. Governments who seek to meet the demand of the high-end services sectors pursue a strategy of ‘open-ended’ higher education expansion. ‘Targeted’ expansion of higher education, instead, is the preferred option for governments in countries characterized by large advanced manufacturing sectors. The latter strategy, however, is hampered by the presence of a partly private higher education system since the ability of governments to successfully pursue their strategies is mediated by the existing institutional framework in the realm of higher education policy. Empirically, the argument finds strong support through three country case studies – Germany, South Korea, and the United Kingdom – that allow to simultaneously leverage a most-similar and most-different research design.