
Japan: The "Haves" are Gaining and the "Have-Nots" are Losing
Author(s) -
Yoshiaki Obara
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
international higher education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2372-4501
pISSN - 1084-0613
DOI - 10.6017/ihe.2009.57.8455
Subject(s) - scholarship , metropolitan area , face (sociological concept) , higher education , economic growth , falling (accident) , political science , demographic economics , business , development economics , economics , sociology , psychology , geography , social science , archaeology , psychiatry
Many Japanese private higher education institutions also face a risk of falling into the "losing group." It seems that small/rural colleges end up receiving less extra income from admissions over the tei-in (the quota for first-year students) level. This loss creates less scholarship money for capable students. The small/rural institutions are likely to lose prospective students as a negative cycle works against them. This tendency, in turn, augments the opportunities available to large, metropolitan higher education institutions. In Japan, a clear division is anticipated, with the larger institutions getting much larger and the smaller and rural ones getting much smaller. This is a hard fact that we will face in the foreseeable future.