Abstract
The paper explores the dynamics of competition in higher education. National competition and global competition are distinct, but feed into each other. Higher education produces ‘positional goods’ (Hirsch 1976) that provide access to social prestige and income-earning. Research universities aim to maximise their status as producers of positional goods. This status is a function of student selectivity plus research performance. At system-level competition bifurcates between exclusivist elite institutions that produce highly value positional goods, where demand always exceeds supply and expansion is constrained to maximise status; and mass institutions (profit and non-profit) characterised by place-filling and expansion. Intermediate universities are differentiated between these poles. In global competition, the networked open information environment has facilitated (1) the emergence of a world-wide positional market of elite US/UK universities; and (2) the rapid development of a commercial mass market led by UK and Australian universities. Global competition is vectored by research capacity. This is dominated by English language, especially US universities, contributing to the pattern of asymmetrical resources and one-way global flows. The paper uses Australia as its example of system segmentation and global/national interface. It closes by reflecting on a more balanced global distribution of capacity.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
P. Aungles I. Buchanan T. Karmel M. MacLachlan (2002) HECS and Opportunities in Higher Education: Department of Education Science and Training (DEST) Canberra
M. Bastedo P. Gumport (2003) ArticleTitle‘Access to what? mission differentiation and academic stratification in U.S. public higher education’ Higher Education. 46 341–359 Occurrence Handle10.1023/A:1025374011204
Bourdieu, P. (1996). The State Nobility: Elite Schools in the Field of Power. translated by L. Clough. Oxford: Polity Press.
M. Castells (2001) The Internet Galaxy: Reflections on the Internet, Business and Society Oxford University Press Oxford
Chapman, B. (2003). ‘Hidden costs the big burden’, The Australian, 10 December, p. 36.
Department of Education, Science and Training, DEST (2003, 2004) Selected Higher Education Statistics. http://www.dest.gov.au/highered/statinfo.htm
R. Frank (1985) Choosing the Right Pond: Human behaviour and the quest for status Oxford University Press New York
Frank, R. (2001). ‘Higher education: The ultimate winner-take-all market?’ In Devlin, M. and Meyerson, J. (eds.), Forum Futures: Exploring the future of higher education. Forum Strategy Series Vol. 3. Jossey-Bass.
R. Frank P. Cook (1995) The Winner-Take-All Society The Free Press New York
O. Fulton (1996) ‘Differentiation and diversity in a newly unitary system: The case of the UK’ V. Meek L. Goedegebuure O. Kivinen R. Rinne (Eds) The Mockers and the Mocked: Comparative Perspectives on Differentiation, Convergence and Diversity in Higher Education Pergammon Oxford
R. Geiger (2004) Market Coordination In Higher Education: the United States P. Teixeira B. Jong bloed D. Dill (Eds) Markets in Higher Education: Rhetoric or reality Kluwer Dordrecht 161–184
F. Hirsch (1976) Social Limits to Growth Harvard University Press Cambridge
IDP Education Australia, with Australian Education International (2001). Comparative Costs of Higher Education Courses for International Students. Sydney: IDP.
IDP Education Australia, IDP (2004). Data on the comparative costs of courses. http://www.idp.com.au
Institute for International Education, IIE (2003). Data on US international education. http://www.iie.org/
James, R., Baldwin, G. and McInnis, C. (1999). Which University? The Factors Influencing the Choices of Prospective Undergraduates. Evaluations and Investigations Program, Higher Education Division (Canberra, DEST) http://www.dest.gov.au/archive/highered/eippubs/99-3/whichuni.pdf
R. King (Eds) (2004) The University in the Global Age Palgrave Macmillan Houndsmills
Linguasphere Observatory (2003). data on world language use. http://www.linguasphere.org/
S. Marginson (2001) ArticleTitle‘Trends in the funding of Australian higher education’ The Australian Economic Review. 34 IssueID2 205–215 Occurrence Handle10.1111/1467-8462.00190
S. Marginson (2004a) ArticleTitle‘National and global competition in higher education’ Australian Educational Researcher. 31 IssueID2 1–28
S. Marginson (2004b) ArticleTitle‘Don’t leave me hanging on the Anglophone: The potential for online distance education in the Asia-Pacific region’ Higher Education Quarterly. 58 IssueID2/3 74–113
S. Marginson M. Considine (2000) The Enterprise University: Power, Governance and Reinvention in Australia Cambridge University Press Cambridge
S. Marginson G. Rhoades (2002) ArticleTitle‘Beyond national states markets and systems of higher education: A glonacal agency heuristic’ Higher Education. 43 281–309
Marginson, S. and Sawir, E. (2005). ‘University Leaders’ Strategies in the Global Environment: A Comparative Study of Universitas Indonesia and the Australian National University’, Higher Education, forthcoming.
Mazzarol, T., Soutar, G., Smart, D. and Choo, S. (2001). Perceptions, Information and Choice. Canberra: Australian Education International www.dest.gov.au
Y. Moogan S. Baron K. Harris (1999) ArticleTitle‘Decision-making behaviour of potential higher education students’ Higher Education Quarterly. 53 IssueID3 211–228 Occurrence Handle10.1111/1468-2273.00127
Nelson. B., Commonwealth Minister for Education, Science and Training (2003a). Our Universities: Backing Australia’s Future www.dest.gov.au/highered/index1.htm
Nelson. B., Commonwealth Minister for Education, Science and Training (2003b). Higher Education. Report for 2003 to 2005 Triennium www.dest.gov.au/highered/index1.htm
InstitutionalAuthorNameOrganisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, OECD (1983) Policies for Higher Education in the 1980s OECD Paris
InstitutionalAuthorNameOECD (2002) International Mobility of the Highly Skilled OECD Paris
InstitutionalAuthorNameOECD (2004) Internationalisation and Trade in Higher Education OECD Paris
InstitutionalAuthorNameOECD (2004) Education at a Glance OECD Paris
P. Scott (Eds) (1998) The Globalisation of Higher Education Open University Press Buckingham
Shanghai Jiao Tong University Institute of Higher Education, SJTUIHE (2004). Academic Ranking of World Universities http://ed.sjtu.edu.cn/ranking.htm
R. Teese (2000) Academic Success and Social Power Melbourne University Press Melbourne
Tremblay, K. (2002). ‘Student mobility between and towards OECD countries: A comparative analysis’, in OECD, International Mobility of the Highly Skilled. Paris: OECD, pp. 39–67.
M. Trow (2000) ArticleTitle‘From mass higher education to universal education: The American advantage’ Minerva. 37 1–26 Occurrence Handle10.1023/A:1004708520977
Watson, L. (1999). Survey of Private Providers in Australian Higher Education 1999. Canberra: DEST http://www.dest.gov.au/archive/highered/eippubs/eip00_4/survey.pdf
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Marginson, S. Dynamics of National and Global Competition in Higher Education. High Educ 52, 1–39 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-004-7649-x
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-004-7649-x