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Impact evaluation of the voluntary early retirement policy on research and technology outputs of the faculties of science in Morocco

Hamid Bouabid (), Mohamed Dalimi and Zayer ElMajid
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Hamid Bouabid: Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research
Mohamed Dalimi: Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research
Zayer ElMajid: Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research

Scientometrics, 2011, vol. 86, issue 1, No 10, 125-132

Abstract: Abstract Scientometric indicators or science metrics, conventional and derived ones, are used in ex-post evaluating of a government policy with impact on research system. Publications, citations, h-index, Glänzel model, and patents are applied in both micro and meso levels. This provides useful insight into the impact of the voluntary early retirement policy on research and technological outputs of the faculties of science in Morocco and consequently on the overall Morocco’s research system. The use of these metrics showed that the effect of the initiative was quite limited by affecting an average of 8% of the professor staffs of these institutions. Furthermore, each professor benefiting from this initiative had produced an average of 3.7 publications indexed in SCI in all his (her) career. The few number of the publications attributed to these professors had been gradually decreasing even 6 years before the initiative. No specific scientific field had intensively been struck. The findings also support that these professors were in general more ‘author’ than ‘inventor’. Inventor-professor institutions were likely more affected by the initiative. By means of these metrics, even if the initiative had not contributed to rejuvenate the professor-staffs of the faculties of science in Morocco, would nevertheless be a stimulus of their research system with respect to their scientometric indicators.

Keywords: Public policy; Metrics; Research and technology outputs; Evaluation; Morocco (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2011
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (4)

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DOI: 10.1007/s11192-010-0271-z

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