Universidades regionales y migración externa de los graduados: impacto en la esfera económica (ejemplo de la región de Primorsky)

Autores/as

  • Viacheslav A. Andreev Department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation
  • Tatyana V. Varkulevich Department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation
  • Ilya A. Bedrachuk Department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation
  • Marina N. Arnaut Department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation
  • Erik Yu. Chudaev Department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation

Palabras clave:

Universidad regional, migración de graduados, especialistas calificados, fuga de cerebros, educación superior, proceso educativo.

Resumen

Primorsky krai, una región ubicada en el Lejano Oriente de Rusia, sufre un déficit con graduados calificados para facilitar los procesos económicos. Existe una brecha entre la oferta de personal específico para avanzar en la economía y la capacidad de las universidades locales para satisfacerla. La migración externa de los graduados, llamada "fuga de cerebros", es un elemento disuasorio para el desarrollo de la economía. Aproximadamente el 78 por ciento del flujo migratorio son los jóvenes menores de 35 años. Junto con la asimetría de la oferta y la demanda debido a una calificación profesional, la tendencia a reducir los graduados de las universidades conduce a un desequilibrio estructural en el mercado laboral. Como resultado, la región solo podrá satisfacer parcialmente las necesidades de la economía de los empleados de mayor grado. Por lo tanto, para las universidades regionales es vital desarrollar programas educativos que se ajusten a las esferas económicas prospectivas, tomando el pronóstico para la economía y el mercado laboral, al menos durante 5-7 años. El objetivo estratégico de una universidad regional central es reducir el desequilibrio en el mercado laboral y proporcionar a la economía conocimientos y habilidades específicas. Una universidad axial, o una universidad regional central, se está convirtiendo en un centro de investigación y proyectos que puede transformar el conocimiento en un producto comercial. Genera una red de asociaciones que cubre los límites de todo el sistema económico de una región. 

Descargas

Los datos de descargas todavía no están disponibles.

Biografía del autor/a

Viacheslav A. Andreev, Department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation

Associate professor at the department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation

Tatyana V. Varkulevich, Department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation

PhD in economic sciences, head of the department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation

Ilya A. Bedrachuk, Department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation

PhD in economic sciences, associate professor at the department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation

Marina N. Arnaut, Department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation

PhD in economic sciences, associate professor at the department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation

Erik Yu. Chudaev, Department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation

Bachelor at the department of economics and management, Vladivostok State University of Economic and Service , Vladivostok, Russian Federation

Citas

Audretsch D. B., Lehmann E.E., Warning S. (2005) University spillovers and new firm location., Research Policy 34, 1113-22

Bishop K., D’Estee P., Neely A. (2011) Gaining from interactions with universities: multiple methods for nurturing absorptive capacity., Research Policy 40, 30-40

Crookston A. and Hooks G. (2012) Community colleges, budget cuts, and jobs: the impact of community colleges on employment growth in rural U.S. counties, 1976-2004.,
Sociology of Education 85, 350-72

Faggian A. and McCann P. (2009) Human capital, graduate migration and innovation in British regions., Cambridge Journal of Economics 33, 317-33

Garmonova A.V., Sokolova E.E., Ryakhina N.A. (2015) Russian universities. Vision of future: Drons or crafts? Quality, Social Justice and Accountability in Education Worldwide. In BSES Conference Books. Volume 13, number 2. Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 105–114

Goldstein H.A. and Dru?ker J. (2006) The economic development impacts of universities on regions: do size and distance matter?, Economic Development Quarterly
20, 22-43

Goldstein H.A., Maier G., Luger M.I. (1995) The university as an instrument for economic and business development: U.S. and European comparisons., in DILL D. D. and SPORN B. (Eds) Emerging Patterns of Social Demand and University Reform: Through a Glass Darkly, pp. 105-33. Pergamon, Oxford, United Kingdom

Hausman N. (2012) University innovation, local economic growth, and entrepreneurship.

Huggins R. and Johnston A. (2009) The economic and innovation contribution of universities: a regional perspective., Environment and Planning C 27, 1088-106 Lazarev G.I., Krivoshapova S.V., Krivoshapov V.G. (2017) The university integration management model in the national innovation system. Espacios, 38 (56), 26.

Nagle M. (2007) Canonical analysis of university presence and industrial comparative advantage., Economic Development Quarterly 21, 325-38

Petruk G.V., Kim A.G., Vaschuk A. S.. (2019). Aspectos regionales de la migración rusa: en el ejemplo de la región de Primorsky. Religación. Revista De Ciencias Sociales Y Humanidades, 4(18), 170-175. Recuperado a partir de http://revista.religacion.com/index.php/about/article/view/371

Pinkovetskaia, I.S. (2019). Indicadores económicos de la actividad de las pequeñas y medianas empresas en Rusia. Revista Científica del Amazonas. Vol. 2, Núm. 4, 5-17.

Pinkovetskaia, Iuliia; Arbeláez, Diego; Rojas, Magda; Gromova, Tatiana; Nikitina, Irina (2019). Female entrepreneurship development in the Russian Federation. Revista Amazonia Investiga. Vol. 8, Núm. 18. Enero-Febrero, 2019, 111-118.

Shelomentsev A., Kozlova O., Antropov V., Terentyeva T. (2018) Buildup of federal universities' social responsibility in the context of development of Russia's regions. World Review of Entrepreneurship, Management and Sustainable Development, 14 (1-2), pp. 187-204

Uyarra E. (2010) Conceptualizing the regional roles of universities, implications and contradictions., European Planning Studies 18, 1227-46

Woodward D., Figueiredo O. and Guimaraes P. (2006) Beyond the Silicon Valley: university R&D and high-technology location., Journal of Urban Economics 60, 15-32.

Wright M., Mosey S., Noke H. (2012) Academic entrepreneurship and economic competitiveness: rethinking the role of the entrepreneur., Economics of Innovation and New Technology 21, 429-44.

Descargas

Publicado

2019-10-11

Cómo citar

Andreev, V. A., Varkulevich, T. V., Bedrachuk, I. A., Arnaut, M. N., & Chudaev, E. Y. (2019). Universidades regionales y migración externa de los graduados: impacto en la esfera económica (ejemplo de la región de Primorsky). Amazonia Investiga, 8(23), 547–555. Recuperado a partir de https://amazoniainvestiga.info/index.php/amazonia/article/view/902

Número

Sección

Articles