In evaluating research investments, it is important to establish whether the expertise gained by researchers in conducting their projects propagates into the broader economy. For eight universities, it was possible to combine data from the UMETRICS project, which provided administrative records on graduate students supported on funded research, with data from the U.S. Bureau of the Census. The analysis covers 2010-2012 earnings and placement outcomes of people receiving doctorates in 2009-2011. Almost 40% of supported doctorate recipients, both federally and non-federally funded, enter industry and, when they do, they disproportionately get jobs at large and high wage establishments in high tech and professional service industries. While PhD recipients spread nationally, there is also geographic clustering in employment near the universities that trained and employed the researchers. We also show large differences across fields in placement outcomes.
Several pricing models exist for providing access to electronic journals. Models may be based on the composition of a package of resources, the size of the purchasing institution, or other factors. Libraries combining to form consortia may realize pricing benefits. In this workshop these factors were considered from the perspectives of the access provider, the publisher, and the consortium, with feedback from librarians.
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