4.4 Article

More than STEM: spillovers from higher education institution infrastructure investments in the arts

Journal

JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
Volume 46, Issue 6, Pages 1784-1813

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10961-020-09825-2

Keywords

Spillovers; Higher education institutions; Cultural infrastructure; Arts

Funding

  1. Research: Art Works program at the National Endowment for the Arts [17-3800-7015]

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Investments in arts infrastructure by higher education institutions can have spillover effects on regional business activities, including jobs and firms, especially in the arts industry. Research findings suggest that these investments have a positive and consistent impact on promoting regional economic growth.
Higher education institutions (HEIs) represent an enormous density of investment and resources, concentrating infrastructure spending and creating high human capital citizens and knowledge spillovers increasingly seen as critical to advancing regional quality of life. While HEIs' prominent role in promoting regional economic growth, innovation, and attractiveness receives considerable research attention, most of that attention is paid to aspects of HEIs that are directly related to STEM activity. There are various theories that suggest spillovers from non-STEM activity at HEIs as well, specifically in the arts. This study examines whether spillovers occur for HEIs' large capital investments in the arts. Specifically, we focus on HEI investments in arts physical infrastructure and whether these investments have any effects on regional-level business activity, including jobs and firms. To analyze HEI spillovers of physical arts infrastructure on regional jobs and firms, we use construction starts data on building projects from Dodge Analytics, Inc. and data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, which include administrative data for every college, university, and technical/vocational institution that participates in the federal student financial aid programs. We couple these data with public data on regional-level socioeconomic indicators from the U.S. Census Bureau's Zip-code Business Patterns data. We employ a quasi-experimental propensity-score matching design in order to control for a host of HEI and regional-level characteristics in examining the impact of infrastructure investments. The results suggest strong and consistent spillover effects (i.e. overall and specifically in the arts industry) for regions with HEIs that make these investments.

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