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Foreign education, culture and corruption - Determinants and consequences of global student flows between 1970 and 2015

Beckmann, Leonie LU (2019) EKHS42 20191
Department of Economic History
Abstract
Foreign education has been growing constantly for the past decades while research on it has
remained scarce. Although research found that migration choices are determined in parts by cultural differences, no study investigated this relationship for foreign education. Therefore, this thesis studies how cultural differences influence bilateral student flows by using a gravity model. Similarly, the consequences of foreign education are scarcely identified, giving rise to the question if foreign education has an impact on the institutional setting of the origin coun-try. To answer this question, this thesis further studies the effect of foreign education on cor-ruption. Using a panel dataset of 206 origin and 157 destination countries over... (More)
Foreign education has been growing constantly for the past decades while research on it has
remained scarce. Although research found that migration choices are determined in parts by cultural differences, no study investigated this relationship for foreign education. Therefore, this thesis studies how cultural differences influence bilateral student flows by using a gravity model. Similarly, the consequences of foreign education are scarcely identified, giving rise to the question if foreign education has an impact on the institutional setting of the origin coun-try. To answer this question, this thesis further studies the effect of foreign education on cor-ruption. Using a panel dataset of 206 origin and 157 destination countries over the period 1970-2015, it appears that cultural differences influence student flows positively, although the impact is declining over time. Further, foreign education has the potential to reduce corruption in the country of origin, depending on the corruption level of the destination countries. Simi-larly, the cultural values prevailing in the host countries are related with corruption in the origin country, supporting the hypothesis of this thesis that norms and values are adopted and transferred home. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Beckmann, Leonie LU
supervisor
organization
course
EKHS42 20191
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Foreign education, Corruption, Culture, Hofstede
language
English
id
8985582
date added to LUP
2019-08-22 08:30:20
date last changed
2019-08-22 08:30:20
@misc{8985582,
  abstract     = {{Foreign education has been growing constantly for the past decades while research on it has
remained scarce. Although research found that migration choices are determined in parts by cultural differences, no study investigated this relationship for foreign education. Therefore, this thesis studies how cultural differences influence bilateral student flows by using a gravity model. Similarly, the consequences of foreign education are scarcely identified, giving rise to the question if foreign education has an impact on the institutional setting of the origin coun-try. To answer this question, this thesis further studies the effect of foreign education on cor-ruption. Using a panel dataset of 206 origin and 157 destination countries over the period 1970-2015, it appears that cultural differences influence student flows positively, although the impact is declining over time. Further, foreign education has the potential to reduce corruption in the country of origin, depending on the corruption level of the destination countries. Simi-larly, the cultural values prevailing in the host countries are related with corruption in the origin country, supporting the hypothesis of this thesis that norms and values are adopted and transferred home.}},
  author       = {{Beckmann, Leonie}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Foreign education, culture and corruption - Determinants and consequences of global student flows between 1970 and 2015}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}