Markets in Education: A Theoretical Note
- 1 November 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Australian Journal of Education
- Vol. 39 (3) , 294-312
- https://doi.org/10.1177/000494419503900306
Abstract
The development of market relations is a striking feature of education in Australia and comparable countries. Education continues to produce non-market outputs (‘use values’) as well as market outputs, but participation in schooling is being reworked as market consumption; schools, TAFE institutions and universities are now required to sell themselves, and a range of services is provided on full cost basis. This article re-theorises markets in education, drawing on political economy and social theory (including the literature on post-modernism). It defines educational markets and describe four types of commodity produced: positional goods, self goods, training goods and knowledge goods. Post-compulsory education's long-standing role, as a vast competition for scarce social position, constitutes a form of market (one ordered by both government and private interests), and is the platform on which more orthodox economic markets in training and knowledge goods are being erected.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
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