Aligning incentives for reforming higher education in Tunisia

Joint Authors

Bu Ghzala, Mongi
Ghazuani, Samir
Ben Hafaiedh, Abd al-Wahhab

Source

Economic Research Forum : Working Paper Series

Issue

Vol. 2016, Issue 979-1073 (31 Dec. 2016), pp.0-35, 36 p.

Publisher

Economic Research Forum for the Arab Countries Iran and Turkey

Publication Date

2016-12-31

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

36

Main Subjects

Educational Sciences
Information Technology and Computer Science

Abstract EN

This paper is about the institutional and regulatory system governing higher education in Tunisia; its focus is on autonomy and accountability and it also compares the performance of public higher education graduates to the private sector’s.

The main idea guiding this paper is that better educational outcomes depend, among other things, on the institutional arrangements and the incentives structure they generate.

The paper analyzes the current incentive system underlying the functioning of the university system in Tunisia.

In spite of the reforms attempted to improve the quality of the education system this system remains very disconnected from the demand side of the labor market.

Management and academic staff have little incentive to adapt their training and research programs to the market needs.

This is to a large extent because they enjoy little autonomy and are hardly accountable.

The paper also relies on data drawn from the recent Tunisia Higher Education Graduates’ Survey (THEGS 2015) initiated by ERF which builds on similar studies previously undertaken by ERF in Egypt and Jordan.

This data is used to compare the outcome of the public universities with the private institutions with a focus on the employment performance of their graduates.

Private universities behave differently, and some try to innovate in terms of pedagogy and to be closer to the potential employers’ demands.

However, they remain small and attract less than 8 percent of the total student body.

They are all profit driven and tend to have few if any permanent academic staff; instead, they rely mostly on temporary teachers.

Nevertheless, based on the THEGS 2015 data, they manage to perform quite well compared to their public counterparts.

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American Psychological Association (APA)

Bu Ghzala, Mongi& Ghazuani, Samir& Ben Hafaiedh, Abd al-Wahhab. 2016. Aligning incentives for reforming higher education in Tunisia. Economic Research Forum : Working Paper Series،Vol. 2016, no. 979-1073, pp.0-35.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-729445

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Bu Ghzala, Mongi…[et al.]. Aligning incentives for reforming higher education in Tunisia. Economic Research Forum : Working Paper Series No. 979-1073 (Dec. 2016), pp.0-35.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-729445

American Medical Association (AMA)

Bu Ghzala, Mongi& Ghazuani, Samir& Ben Hafaiedh, Abd al-Wahhab. Aligning incentives for reforming higher education in Tunisia. Economic Research Forum : Working Paper Series. 2016. Vol. 2016, no. 979-1073, pp.0-35.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-729445

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes appendices : p. 19-35

Record ID

BIM-729445