Samantha Stainburn

Writer | Editor

The Case of the Vanishing Full-Time Professor

(The New York Times, 30 December 2009)

THE REALITY

If you’ve written a few five-figure tuition checks or taken on 10 years’ of debt, you probably think you’re paying to be taught by full-time professors. But it’s entirely possible that most of your teachers are freelancers.

In 1960, 75 percent of college instructors were full-time tenured or tenure-track professors; today only 27 percent are. The rest are graduate students or adjunct and contingent faculty — instructors employed on a per-course or yearly contract basis, usually without benefits and earning a third or less of what their tenured colleagues make. The recession means their numbers are growing.

“When a tenure-track position is empty,” says Gwendolyn Bradley, director of communications at the American Association of University Professors, “institutions are choosing to hire three part-timers to save money.”

THE PROBLEM

While many adjuncts are talented teachers with the same degrees as tenured professors, they’re treated as second-class citizens on most campuses, and that affects students.

It’s sometimes harder to track down adjuncts outside of class, because they rarely have offices or even their own departmental mailboxes.

Many patch together jobs at different colleges to make ends meet, and with commuting, there’s less time to confer with students or prepare for class. It’s not unusual for adjuncts to be hired at the last minute to teach courses they’ve never taught. And with no job security, they may consider it advantageous to tailor classes for student approval.

HOW TO

Colleges tend to play down the increasingly central role of adjuncts. This fall, the American Federation of Teachers complained that some top-ranked universities exaggerated the percentage of full-time faculty to U.S. News & World Report for its rankings. U.S. News declined to investigate.

Another source is the “Compare Higher Education Institutions” search tool at A.F.T.’s Higher Education Data Center (highereddata.aft.org). These are the stats that colleges report to the federal government.

Ask admissions officers point-blank: what percentage of classes and discussion sections are taught by part-timers and graduate assistants, and are they required to hold office hours?

For entry-level classes — the ones tenured faculty famously don’t want to teach — the squeaky wheel often gets a full-time professor, says Harlan Cohen, author of “The Naked Roommate: And 107 Other Issues You Might Run Into in College.” “If you’re not thrilled with your adjunct professor,” he says, “go to the head of the department and see what options are available. They may put you in a different section.”

CAVEATS

If you take a strict anti-adjunct stance, you may miss out on some star instructors — Barack Obama taught a seminar on racism and the law at the University of Chicago Law School as an adjunct. Professoring part-time is a hobby for overachieving architects, graphic designers, lawyers and entrepreneurs, all of whom can share insights from real-world experiences that full-time academics haven’t had.

“Before making assumptions that an adjunct is bad, Google them,” Mr. Cohen says. “You may find that real estate teacher is one step removed from Donald Trump’s V.P. on LinkedIn, and these are the types of people you want to meet.”

Read this article at the New York Times.

Transferring? Get schooled

(The New York Times, 15 April 2011)

ABOUT a third of students change campuses on their way to a degree, but it’s often a bumpier ride than they expect.

Most application deadlines for transfer students are in March or April, and some as late as summer — July 1 for the University of Albany, for example. Applicants won’t find out if they’ve won a place until the dust settles on returning students, usually mid-May or later.

That puts transfers behind the curve of returning students, who have already registered for the most popular classes or populated the best rooms in the spring housing lottery.

How can you avoid feeling as if you’re last in line when you change schools?

FINANCIAL AID: DON’T GET GYPPED

Twenty-three percent of colleges don’t provide merit aid for transfer students, according to a 2010 report by the National Association for College Admission Counseling. Those that do often give them less — especially if the transferring is in January, when coffers tend to be depleted. And colleges that pledge to meet 100 percent of demonstrated financial need for freshmen don’t always make the same assurances to transfer applicants. In fact, there’s a greater chance that needing aid as a transfer will influence whether a college admits you. That’s the case at Brown and Wesleyan, even though they are need-blind when considering freshmen.

The picture isn’t grim across the board, though: there are universities — Smith College and Syracuse University are two — that commit to providing transfer students with equal funds. Syracuse, a private university with up to 15 percent of undergraduates having made a switch, considers itself transfer friendly. In addition to articulation agreements it has with community colleges to ease the transition, the university in November signed dual admission agreements with Onondaga Community College in Syracuse and Georgia Perimeter College in Atlanta, its state’s largest public two-year institution.

Such “2+2 programs” are a growing trend: freshmen who want to start at a two-year college — either because of money or academic concerns — are guaranteed admission to the four-year institution as juniors if they maintain certain grades. And as part of those agreements, Syracuse will estimate aid packages for potential transfers two years in advance.

Donald A. Saleh, vice president for enrollment management at Syracuse, says it doesn’t hurt for other applicants to ask for a similarly detailed estimate before applying: “If a student were to approach us and ask us for help in understanding their financial aid, we would be ready to do the same thing for them.”

Public institutions inundated by applications may not be so accommodating. In these cases, transfers won’t learn what financial aid they will get until they’ve been accepted, which might not be until summer.

The City University of New York, for example, saw 27,800 transfer applications for fall 2010, almost 24 percent more than the year before. By the time the admissions office had processed its Feb. 1 priority deadline applications, CUNY’s senior colleges were at capacity. Forty percent of transfer applications arrived after that deadline, and qualified students were, atypically, waitlisted. Some weren’t admitted until two weeks before classes started, in August.

Apply early and to more than one place. “You need to build choices for yourself,” Mr. Saleh says. “If you apply to four colleges and get into three, you can go for the best fit academically, socially and financially.”

CREDITS: MAKE THEM COUNT

A big appeal of transferring is getting to take classes not available at your current college. But transfer students can find themselves toiling at required courses instead because courses already taken don’t match up with the academic program at the campus they want to go to.

“You’ve got to keep your eye on what is transferable and what requirements are being covered by the courses you’ve already taken,” says Eric J. Furda, dean of admissions at the University of Pennsylvania. “If you’re coming in absolutely cold on foreign language, right there you’re going to have to take four classes at Penn because we have a foreign language requirement.”

Very often, credits at one institution don’t apply toward a major or fulfill core requirements at another. Colleges won’t give the official word on what they will accept until they have an enrollment deposit in hand. Applicants can ask transfer admissions advisers for a sense of what additional work is needed to complete a particular major. If facing too many required courses, consider somewhere else.

“We have conversations with prospective students all the time,” says Curtis Rodgers, dean of enrollment management at Columbia University’s School of General Studies, for nontraditional-age students. “Often the problems that transfer students face have to do with not having reviewed their options.”

A community college that has an articulation agreement with a state university spells out what courses count for its degree. Still, study the fine print.

Brianne Giger, an acting major who recently transferred to the University of Arizona, took a computer science class because it fulfilled a math requirement at her community college. “The book was $300, and it was really hard,” she says. “As soon as I got here, they told me it was only going to count as an elective.”

Articulation agreements change and are confusing enough that even advisers are known to give students misinformation, says Peter Riley Bahr, an assistant professor at the Center for the Study of Higher and Postsecondary Education at the University of Michigan. So, he urges, always get a second opinion on whether your course schedule puts you on track to transfer into the program you want.

“Talk to your community college counselor,” he says, “then call the four-year institution you want to transfer to and speak with an adviser there as well.”

HOUSING: DIG HARD FOR NEW DIGS

Many universities — the University of Vermont and the University of Pittsburgh, for example — guarantee on-campus housing for upperclassmen but not for transfers. Or transfers end up in less desirable dorms. Penn State automatically places students from other universities in “supplemental housing,” one oversize room for four to eight students.

When you must live off-campus, go to the transfer orientation. Flagship publics that bring in a thousand or more transfer students a year typically schedule several orientations throughout the summer. For the most housing choices, “attend the earliest orientation you can,” says Eva Rivas, executive director of the Transfer, Re-entry and Student Parent Center at the University of California, Berkeley.

“Landlords will publicize their buildings through the transfer center, and transfer counselors and other students can let you know how close to campus different places are.”

ACCLIMATION: ENGAGE

Once on campus, be prepared to advocate for the experience you want.

“When you’re a transfer student, everyone in your grade is feeling settled in,” says Elizabeth Daly, director of orientation and parent programs at Northwestern University. “So you have to be the kind of person who reaches out and introduces yourself.”

Becky Keith transferred to the University of Virginia from Georgetown University in 2008, but her new life didn’t fall into place instantly. Virginia officials told Ms. Keith, a biochemistry major aiming for med school, that she would have to take a first-year biology lab class even though she had already taken one. (At Georgetown, Intro to Bio includes labs; at Virginia, it’s two separate courses.)

She felt invisible in Virginia’s large science classes. And she ended up in a dorm with five other transfers that was “not the best experience,” she says, because it didn’t help her meet other students.

But she made the effort. She brought her Georgetown biology syllabus to the dean’s office and won credit for the labs she had taken there. She visited professors during office hours, and met new friends volunteering with an emergency medical technician unit.

This year, she’s living in a dorm that mixes transfers and returning students, a new housing setup Virginia is trying. Now, she says, “I’ve found my niche.”

Read this article at the New York Times.

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Burdens of Operating a Century-Old Brand

A three-piece suit from the Hart Schaffner Marx archives.

A three-piece suit from the Hart Schaffner Marx archives.

(Crain’s Chicago Business, 21 May 2007)

Chicago’s Largest Public Companies — No. 90: Hartmarx Corp.

They may carry BlackBerrys instead of fountain pens, but many executives still sport the suit label their great-grandpas wore: Hart Schaffner Marx. Founded in Chicago in 1887, Hartmarx Corp. has a longstanding reputation for high-quality tailoring that has helped it grow from a single, family-owned clothing store into a $600-million company that is the largest suit maker in America.

Hartmarx makes suits under 14 labels it owns or licenses, including Hart Schaffner Marx, a classic line that retails for upwards of $700 in stores like Macy’s, and Hickey Freeman, a luxury line aimed at CEOs that sells for $1,200 at Neiman Marcus.

But maintaining a century-old brand has burdens, too. “Every 10 or 20 years, you have to make some dramatic changes,” CEO Homi Patel, 57, says. “If you get stuck in what you did before and are not constantly evolving, it can be a problem.”One advantage Hartmarx has over competitors trolling for women’s brands is a reputation for giving designers creative freedom, says Gary Giblen, an analyst with Brean Murray Carret & Co. in New York. “Most other companies centralize everything and make it hard for an entrepreneur to stay on,” he says.

In 1982, Hartmarx branched into men’s sportswear, manufacturing golf apparel by Jack Nicklaus and polo shirts and slacks for British label Ted Baker. More recently, it embraced women’s apparel. Through acquisitions, it owns 10 womenswear lines, a division that has grown from 8% of business in 2004 to 25% today.That’s an important edge as Hartmarx continues to diversify its clothing lines, a strategy that has become crucial as more companies relax their office dress codes. In the early 1980s, 95% of company revenues came from suit sales. Today, it’s 48%.

Last year, Hartmarx took a hit on its suit lines when department stores Marshall Field’s and Saks Fifth Avenue changed hands. The new owners pared the higher-end brands and pushed their own private labels, causing Hartmarx’s net earnings to plunge 69% year-on-year to $7.3 million. To compensate, Hartmarx is boosting production of its luxury brands and looking for new customers abroad.

Last December, it licensed the Hart Schaffner Marx name to Youngor Group Co. Ltd., the largest men’s apparel manufacturer and retailer in China. The agreement calls for 400 stores across China in 20 years. Six of those stores are scheduled to open in the Shanghai area this fall.

Hartmarx is seeking similar partners in India and Vietnam. If all goes well, Asian businessmen won’t just be buying a suit; they’ll be starting a family tradition.

©2007 by Crain Communications Inc. 
Read this article at Crain’s Chicago Business.

Think you live in globalized world? Think again

(Chicago Booth Review, 16 June 2014)

The globalization of trade is so established that it has lost the power to astound us. Fresh-cut flowers from Kenya are flown daily to Europe’s flower markets. North Americans eat Peruvian asparagus that took only a day to get from field to supermarket. Boeing puts together planes in Seattle using parts from 10 different countries—parts that were preassembled in Japan, Korea, Kansas, and South Carolina. Meanwhile, trading blocs such as the 28-country European Union and trade pacts such as the North American Free Trade Agreement lower tariffs and promote the movement of goods among trading partners.

Yet the global economy is not as integrated or efficient as is widely believed, according to A. Kerem Cosar, assistant professor of economics at Chicago Booth. Asparagus and aircraft parts may be easily shipped from one country to another, but getting goods from their point of origin to international shipping centers within the same country can be expensive—sometimes more expensive than shipping them to a foreign destination. Moreover, exporting goods across borders can incur costs that deter trade even when tariffs have been negotiated down.

“Building good ports and having policies that help exporters may be good, but at the end of the day, firms can’t all pile up close to the seaports in order to export,” says Cosar. “Internal infrastructure is key for your competitiveness as well, to get those goods out.”

China’s long road

Cosar cites the example of China, the world’s second-biggest economy. The country faces the South China Sea, the East China Sea, and the Yellow Sea on its southern and eastern coastlines, and borders Mongolia and Russia to the north, Central Asia to the west, and Vietnam to the south. Since 1978, when China began to open up to foreign trade and investment, the country’s exports have grown exponentially to $2.21 trillion-worth of goods in 2012, according to China’s National Bureau of Statistics.

China ships most of its exports from coastal ports. Just 17.4% of exports to its top 20 trading partners depart by air, and only 6.7% of all its exports travel overland to neighboring countries.

When China’s manufacturing renaissance got under way, congested roads and overloaded railways made transporting goods to seaports slow, unreliable, and expensive, so exporters moved to cities such as Shenzhen and Dongguan in the Pearl River Delta in the south, Suzhou and Shanghai on the east coast, and Dalian in the northeast, between the Bohai Sea and the Yellow Sea, to cut costs. Residents of China’s interior provinces, seeking work that paid more than farming, followed the companies to the coasts.

These days, some 163 million Chinese are long-distance migrants who leave their provinces each year to join companies that employ hundreds of thousands of workers making electronic components, auto parts, appliances, clothing, and more. It’s not uncommon for workers to spend 12 hours a day, six days a week on an assembly line, sewing sweatshirts, stamping metal into kitchen appliances, or screwing components into iPhones. They often leave their children behind in their home villages and live in crowded dormitories on factory property.

In a recent paper, Cosar teamed up with UCLA’s Pablo D. Fajgelbaum to study how international trade affects regional specialization, employment, and income in China. They used industry-level data from China’s 338 prefectures—regions that include several counties or a large city—between 1998 and 2007.

They find that distance from the coast has a sizeable effect on economic activity, particularly for industries that export a high percentage of goods. Firms located 275 miles inland in industries that export an average percentage of goods (20% of output) employed 17% fewer workers than firms in average-exporting industries located on the coast. Inland firms in heavily export-oriented industries, such as furniture manufacturing, which exports 40% of its output, employed 32% fewer workers than their counterparts on the coast.

The impact of poor infrastructure on economic activity in China is reflected in the researchers’ broader findings: when it’s expensive to transport export goods from the interior of a country to a port, export-oriented firms move closer to the ports to save money. Economic activity in these regions increase—the economic output of Guangdong Province on China’s southeast coast, for example, grew from $11 billion in 1978 to an estimated $1 trillion in 2013—and economic activity in the interior suffers.

This phenomenon depresses overall gains from trade as lagging regions drag down the national numbers, Cosar and Fajgelbaum note. At the same time, export-oriented manufacturers crowding into coastal regions force up real-estate rents and employee wages there. So poor infrastructure shrinks international trade gains even for firms that are able to locate close to gateways to foreign markets.

These are concerns shared by developing countries with poor domestic infrastructure that have opened up to international trade, such as Vietnam, where economic activity is concentrated near its ports, and Mexico, where economic activity has been highest along the US border.

Fortunately, infrastructure can be improved, Cosar notes. China has taken steps to better connect interior regions to the coast in recent years. In 2000, it launched a 20-year “go west” initiative, formally called the Western Development Strategy, to encourage companies to locate inland, enticing them with hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of improvements to regional infrastructure and tax incentives. Between 2000 and 2012, China expanded its expressway network an average 16% a year, growing it to 75,000 kilometers of highways by 2012, KPMG reports. And China is undertaking one of the world’s biggest railway expansions, spending $1 trillion to add 120,000 kilometers of railway track by 2020.

Those kind of infrastructure investments make it more appealing for companies to invest in lagging interior regions. Among the companies that have moved production inland to take advantage of lower labor and land costs: computer manufacturers Intel, Dell, and Lenovo, which have opened factories in Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan Province, 1,500 miles from the eastern seaboard. Taiwan-based electronics firm Foxconn Technology Group, the Apple contractor known for its massive “factory cities,” has opened new factories in Chengdu and the inland provinces of Henan and Shanxi. And Unilever, maker of Dove soap and Lipton tea bags, has moved seven factories from Shanghai and Guangdong Province to Hefei
in Anhui Province, 250 miles west of Shanghai.

Ford built its first assembly plant in the southwest Chinese city of Chongqing, 700 long miles as the crow flies from the nearest major port, Guangzhou, in 2001. After that it opened a second assembly plant in Chongqing, and plans to open a third this year, as well as a transmission plant. Chongqing is already Ford’s second-largest manufacturing region after southeast Michigan, and employees in Chongqing will produce 870,000 Ford vehicles a year once the new factories are up and running. “Logistics and transportation infrastructure have reached a level such that it’s profitable for Ford to utilize land in the interior and incur the transportation costs of bringing those [cars and parts] to the large cities on the coast or to export [them] to other Asian countries from those cities,” Cosar observes. Ford declined to comment.

Turkish traffic

Nineteenth-century farmers in the US midwest only brought their grain to major markets when the weather allowed. During the spring, roads could be too muddy to navigate, a problem eventually solved by pavement and train tracks. As infrastructure developed, so did the American heartland and economy. Two hundred years later, how much of a boost can better infrastructure—and roads, in particular—provide to an economy in the era of global trade?

Consider Turkey, the world’s 17th largest economy and 22nd largest exporter by value. Turkey stretches 1,500 miles west to east between Europe and Asia, and 90% of its freight travels by road. Yet, until about ten years ago, Turkey had just one highway, connecting Istanbul, its main economic engine, with Ankara, its capital 300 miles to the east. Most of the country’s roads had a single lane in each direction, making for slow climbs and descents through the country’s mountainous interior, particularly during snowy winters, to get to the low-lying port cities on the Black Sea to the north, the Aegean and Marmara seas to the west, and the Mediterranean Sea to the south.

Adding to the delays, collisions were common, as motorists determined to overtake slow vehicles in front of them would drive into oncoming traffic to pass. Large logistics companies chose not to transport goods to and from certain areas with particularly congested roads because they could not guarantee the products would arrive on time. Independent truckers, whose vehicles were often older, overloaded, and more prone to break down, picked up the business.

In 2002, Turkey launched a major program to improve its infrastructure by upgrading dual-lane roads into four-lane expressways, with a safety divider in the middle. The amount of four-lane roads grew from 12% to 35% between 2003 and 2012. Cosar, who’s originally from Turkey, noticed the difference on a return trip. “What used to be an eight- or nine-hour drive from Istanbul to the Mediterranean seaside is now six or seven hours and much more pleasant,” he says. Even the Istanbul-Ankara route got an upgrade, with the opening of a motorway tunnel through Bolu Mountain in 2007, shaving 2.5 hours off the journey.

Cosar and Banu Demir of Bilkent University in Ankara have quantified the impact of that investment program. The researchers estimate that every $1 spent on upgrading the old roads generated an additional 10¢–15¢ in export revenues. The improvements particularly aided time-sensitive industries such as furniture, chemicals, communications equipment, electrical machinery, and office and computing machinery. They posted bigger increases in exports and employment than industries where fast delivery is less important to consumers, such as luggage and tobacco products.

While the road-improvement scheme was designed to relieve congestion caused by a growing economy and increasing urban population, it’s clear why exporters benefited from the new highways. Even as the number of vehicles on the road doubled, the average travel speed for freight-carrying vehicles increased. Traffic-related fatalities per vehicle-kilometer dropped 40% from 2004 to 2011, likely contributing to increased speed. According to World Bank data, between 2007 and 2012, the median time it took to transport goods from their point of origin to ports and airports in Turkey decreased by 12 to 48 hours. Cosar speculates that higher-quality roads also lowered costs for exporters by reducing wear and tear on vehicles and causing a drop in their freight-insurance expenses as accidents decreased. After the roads were improved, logistics companies expanded scheduled freight services to more cities. The total volume of freight carried by all trucks in Turkey increased 29% between 2004 and 2012, from 157,000 million ton-kilometers to 203,072 million ton-kilometers.

Turkey has been closely watched by officials in countries such as Colombia, Brazil, and Ecuador. In mountainous Colombia, where it takes some 10 hours to drive 270 miles from Bogotá to the port city of Medellín, officials are attempting to attract $20 billion in private investment over the next five years to fund road improvements, which President Juan Manuel Santos has called a top priority.

Windmills without borders

Research suggests traffic and other problems involved in transporting goods from factories to ships or aircraft can be a significant drag on international trade, but there are also limits to what infrastructure investments could accomplish. Cosar has found that there’s another thing that makes it difficult for goods to leave the country: costs incurred at the border. Cosar and two coauthors spotted the phenomenon in a study of European wind turbines.

Along with Paul L.E. Grieco of Pennsylvania State University and Felix Tintelnot in the University of Chicago’s economics department, Cosar looked at wind-turbine manufacturers in Denmark and Germany in 1995 and 1996. The researchers were interested in studying the effects of national borders on market segmentation, and the data on the wind-turbine industry in the two countries included the location of all manufacturers and wind farms, which were scattered throughout each country. This allowed them to account for actual shipping distances and separate the impact of distance from the impact of the border on costs.

Also, Denmark and Germany both belong to the EU, which created a single market in 1992. Members strove to eliminate import or export restrictions by lowering nontariff barriers. In both countries, wind-farm operators are paid above-market rates, bumped up by government subsidies, for the electricity they generate and provide to the electric grid. Operators are free to buy whatever turbines maximize their profits, regardless of where in the EU they are manufactured. In this setting, formal barriers to trade are not creating border costs.

The researchers focused on the years 1995 and 1996 because national price subsidies for electricity generation had been in place for several years and the industry was stable. Subsequent years saw a wave of mergers and acquisitions, including a cross-border acquisition that would have complicated analysis of the border effect. Utility companies later became significant buyers of turbines, making purchases from the same manufacturer for different sites, further blurring the picture.

Pushed by high fuel prices, and because EU countries formally committed to protecting the
environment under the Maastricht Treaty, EU countries have moved away from fuel oil, coal, and
nuclear power while increasing wind, gas, solar, and other renewable power over the past two decades. A total of 117 GW of wind energy capacity is now installed in the EU, up from 2.5 GW in 1995, according to the European Wind Energy Association.

Typically, EU wind-farm owners secure permits for their operation, and manufacturers bid to provide turbines, quoting a price that includes transporting three 100- to 150-foot blades and the 50- to 75-ton box that contains the generator and gearbox, on a massive platform trailer. The turbine is then assembled on site. The farther away from a wind farm a turbine is manufactured, the more it costs to transport, so the researchers expected German wind-farm owners located close to the border would buy turbines from nearby Danish companies rather than from more distant German companies, and vice versa.

In fact, manufacturers tended to sell their turbines domestically, even if there were closer wind farms just over a border, the researchers find. The top five German manufacturers produced 60% of the turbines purchased in Germany but only 2% of those purchased in Denmark. Similarly, Danish manufacturers captured 93% of the Danish market but only 32% of the German market.

This suggests that there are costs at the Danish-German border that make it more expensive for manufacturers to sell turbines and consumers to buy turbines across the border rather than within national boundaries. Among them, manufacturers face one-time entry costs, Cosar observes. These range from developing and installing technology to connect turbines to the foreign electricity grid to obtaining certification for turbines in the foreign country to hiring and managing a country-specific sales team. Manufacturers also have to pay to acquire local permits and to do business with unfamiliar officials. Once established across the border, a company faces yet more costs—associated with writing and enforcing international contracts, visiting foreign locations for maintenance, and dealing with a different currency, language, and culture. Consumers may anticipate having to spend more to settle a dispute with a foreign supplier because it involves slightly different legal systems, Cosar says.

Cosar and his colleagues estimate that the postentry costs of selling turbines across the national border are 85% higher than the costs of selling across an internal provincial or state border for the German firms. “The level of integration between Denmark and Germany is supposed to be deeper than between Canada and the United States, but even there [in this integrated market], we found that the border creates huge friction,” Cosar says.

What would happen if Germany and Denmark were to remove all residual barriers to trade, including language, cultural, and administrative differences, so that the impact of the national border would be reduced to that of a state border? The researchers performed this thought experiment to show what removing barriers might accomplish, estimating that if all frictions could be removed, German firms’ share of the Danish market would increase from 3% to 19% and Danish firms’ share of the German market would grow from 32% to 42%. At the same time, Danish firms’ share of their home market would shrink 16% while German companies’ share of the German market would drop 8%.

However, because there are more wind farms in Germany than in Denmark, Danish firms would make higher profits in the larger German market that would outweigh their losses at home. That means eliminating national border costs would be, overall, good for Danish firms. All German companies would suffer losses, however, as the increased competition would outweigh the gains German firms would make as a result of better access to the Danish market. But wind-farm owners in both countries would benefit, as consumer surplus would rise by 9% in both places.

The work provides food for thought for pro-trade policymakers in countries that have already inked trade agreements, as it suggests they may want to investigate how internal policies might be hindering international trade. Danish policymakers, for example, might want to revisit Denmark’s decision not to adopt the euro. Companies from eurozone countries doing business in Denmark pay costs when they convert their currency to Danish kroner.

“When there are no tariffs and an open border, what remains are residual, nontariff barriers, such as technical and regulatory differences,” Cosar says. “As our wind-turbine paper shows, it seems to have a big impact.”

Viewing trade as a domestic issue

Cosar is keen to increase awareness that barriers to international trade are internal as well as external.

Domestic policymakers aren’t typically focused on how internal regulations or state- or provincial-level investments impact foreign trade, he notes. “When people legislate things like what tests a car should pass in order to be sold in the US market, they do not have in mind, ‘Let’s shut out Japanese car producers or German car producers.’ But the results may create an entry barrier to foreign producers,” he says, adding that a new trade agreement being negotiated between the US and EU, the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, does aim to reduce such barriers. And poor roads that add the equivalent of a few hundred dollars to the cost of driving a container of goods from a factory to a port may motivate an exporter to set up shop in another country.

Cosar has started new research on the market-share differences of big car producers in different countries. “There’s a huge home bias—given similar price and quality of the car, people seem to buy domestic,” he says. He’s investigating whether policy- or border-related costs are behind this phenomenon.

Domestic policy decisions designed to increase international trade can greatly impact life inside a country, creating new sets of winners and losers. Improving infrastructure may lead to interior regions gaining factories that would have otherwise invested in coastal regions, for example. “In the short run there are definitely losers,” when barriers at national borders are removed, Cosar says, referring to companies that chug along in a limited market but do not have the ability to compete in a larger one.

But he believes consumers and producers benefit from more openness in the long run—and from greater efforts on the part of individual nations to promote global trade.

“More competitiveness induces more innovation,” he says. “If you can sell your goods in a larger market, you are more likely to be willing to incur costly innovations.”

Works cited

A. Kerem Cosar and Banu Demir, “Roads and Exports: Evidence from Turkey,” Working paper, January 2014.

A. Kerem Cosar and Pablo D. Fajgelbaum, “Internal Geography, International Trade, and Regional Specialization,” Working paper, November 2013.

A. Kerem Cosar, Paul L.E. Grieco, and Felix Tintelnot, “Borders, Geography, and Oligopoly: Evidence from the Wind Turbine Industry,”Review of Economics and Statistics, forthcoming.

Read this article at Chicago Booth Review.

College Acceptances Piling Up? How to Choose

(The New York Times, 07 February 2014)

CONGRATULATIONS. You’ve been accepted to more than one college. Now comes the hard part: deciding which to go to. Make a mistake and you could be repeating the whole application process again next year — to transfer out.

Let’s say the cost is similar. How to choose between two good options?

Look to the Future

Remember this, says David Montesano, founder of the consulting company College Match: “College is just a tool to help you achieve your life goals.”

If your goal is to make money, don’t assume the more prestigious the institution, the more earnings. Equally smart students make about the same whether they attend a top school or not, according to the economists Stacy Dale and Alan B. Krueger. But Hispanic, black and low-income students, they found, can expect to earn more if they graduate from an elite school. Data at Payscale.com can give you a sense of what graduates of individual colleges earn.

If your goal is grad school, investigate which colleges produce healthy numbers of master’s and doctoral students. Some colleges post comparative lists on their sites crunched from federal surveys. The National Science Foundation also lists feeder schools for science and engineering Ph.D.’s. The percentage from Reed College, by the way, is higher than from Princeton or Harvard.

Steer Clear of Colleges in Crisis

Reading student newspapers online will tell you whether students approve of how officials respond to problems, like hazing or sexual assault. Are students protesting against the Keystone XL pipeline or problems with the school itself, like too many adjunct teachers or disappearing services? And pay attention to public funding of state schools. Budget cuts can increase class size and make it harder to get the courses you need to finish your degree in four years.

Reviews on websites like unigo.com, collegeprowler.com and studentsreview.com can give you a sense of what each school’s students complain about ­ — ­at Cornell, for example, students grouse about being graded on a curve, while Rutgers students bemoan feeling like a number. But the best way to determine the weak points of a particular school is to ask students or recent alumni.

Go Where You’ll Shine

“One of the most important things a person can get out of college is confidence based on success,” says Jane K. Klemmer, an educational consultant in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y. Look for a place where the learning environment and social scene will give you the most opportunities to succeed, she says. “If there are a lot of fancy cars in the parking lot that are going to make you feel poorer and somehow inferior, that could be a problem.”

Matthew Baker of Riley Baker Educational Consulting suggests that you gauge whether you will fit in by asking, “Would I want to hang out with these people on weekends?”

School traditions might also indicate where you belong. Take Colgate University and Grinnell College, two rural liberal arts colleges on pretty campuses that accept students with similar SAT scores and grades. Colgate students begin and end their college careers with a torchlight procession to a bonfire where they sing the school song. A big tradition at Grinnell is the annual Mary B. James cross-dressing ball. It should be no surprise that Colgate is beloved by preppy scholar-athletes while Grinnell is a haven for hipsters who discuss Derrida into the wee hours.

Some relish a challenge. Daniel Surman, a political science student active in Republican politics, ended up at Macalester College, which had offered him the most financial aid. But Macalester topped the Princeton Review’s list of most liberal colleges in 2011. “I was intrigued by the idea of being the iconoclast in the class,” says Mr. Surman. “Being at Macalester, I’ve definitely gotten better at defending my views.”

And he started a student group. Membership: 5 to 15 Republicans.

Read this article at the New York Times.

Dancing With the Book Carts

(The New York Times, 07 February 2014) 

Gettysburg College's drill team in sync at the American Library Association's world championships. (Credit: Curtis Compton, Cognotes, American Library Association)

Gettysburg College’s drill team in sync at the American Library Association’s world championships. (Credit: Curtis Compton, Cognotes, American Library Association)

WHAT SPORT demands the precision of synchronized swimming and the book smarts of a librarian?

Book cart drills, of course, the choreographed routines performed by librarians and graduate students in library science. The activity was popularized in the mid-2000s by Demco, the book-cart manufacturer, which sponsored a world championship competition at the American Library Association’s annual conference for several years.

These days, the action is at homecoming parades and state conventions; library associations in Texas and Massachusetts are planning competitions for their conventions this spring.

Why? Drill teams promote the library and build morale and teamwork, explains John Ison, who hosted competitions before retiring from Demco.

“It’s harder than it looks,” says Janelle Wertzberger, director of reference and instruction at Gettysburg College’s Musselman Library. “You have to have hand signals and visual cues to keep everybody together.”

A signature Gettysburg move: the pinwheel, in which 10 carts line up, five facing forward and five backward, and pivot around a center point like a propeller. Gettysburg won the bronze cart in the 2010 world championship.

The University of Wisconsin, Madison, won the gold in 2005 and the bronze in 2006. For the homecoming parade this past fall, Lindsay Anderson, a second-year master’s student at Madison, helped choreograph a routine set to M.C. Hammer’s “You Can’t Touch This” and other early-’90s tunes.

Where did she get her ideas?

“I checked out a book on book cart precision drill teams from the library.”

Read this article at the New York Times.