Considering College 2-Book Bundle. Ken S. Coates

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foreign-born students to buttress their economies, particularly in high-technology sectors.

      The commitment to college and university expansion has rested on more than the opportunities for personal advancement. Many countries, observing closely the success of scientific and technological innovation in North America, Japan, East Asia, and northern Europe, and desiring rapid economic expansion, concluded that major commitments to an education and research-rich society would produce favourable economic outcomes for the society as a whole. Countries that had lagged far behind in competitiveness and productivity caught up rapidly. Singapore, Taiwan, and South Korea, to use East Asian examples, were transformed as the rapid improvement of the education system underpinned an increasingly technologically proficient society. Other countries, from Finland to Israel, also capitalized on the advanced education of their citizens to create globally competitive economies, in both of these cases underpinned by high-technology industries.

      By the early twenty-first century, almost every country in the world believed that national prosperity rested on an expansion of the post-secondary system. The commitment to national innovation through advanced education and basic research became a global mantra, adopted from Greenland to Botswana, with policy manifestations in most nations. (This phenomenon raises the question of how national innovation policies can be “innovative” when they are the same everywhere, copying standard global practice.) The explosion in the number of universities, the number of students, the number of graduates, the number of postgraduate students, the number of faculty members, the amount of research activity and expenditures, and the volume of academic publication has been truly impressive.

      Indeed, recent estimates suggest that the knowledge base in the world doubles every five years, a growth rate that boggles the mind. If the total volume of knowledge (judged by published research) stood at 100 in 1980—near the real starting point of the global expansion of universities and colleges—then it would have increased to 12,800 in 2015—128 times in a generation. Some of this research is in fields of no economic importance, that will never reach more than a handful of readers—there have been many thousands of scholarly publications about William Shakespeare in the past few decades[10] —but the significance in computer science, engineering, medicine, and other practical fields is considerable.[11] So, the results are impressive: more students, more research, more publications and, as a quick look around the modern economy demonstrates, rapid technological and commercial innovation.

      But there is no linear or simple relationship between post-secondary education and economic advancement. Consider the characteristics of the following country:

      Population: 11.2 million

      Trading population within a three-hour flight: 500+ million

      High school graduation rate: 94 percent

      Number of universities and colleges: 47

      Total student enrolment: 112,000

      Number of medical graduates: 10,500 (half are international students)

      By any global standard, this country is perfectly aligned for global competitiveness and leadership in the new economy. But the nation languishes, with a per-capita income that is only 10 percent of that of the United States,[12] 22 major deficiencies in infrastructure, high unemployment, and large-scale overseas employment of the country’s well-trained professionals. The country is Cuba, an ideologically frozen country caught in a half-century-long conflict with the United States that is only now warming. Mass advanced education has not saved Cuba from the dual burdens of ideology and politics. Much the same is true of Russia, a nation with a distinguished history of mathematical and scientific education and high participation rates—but with a cramped economy. Mass education is no guarantee of national economic success, especially when trumped by politics.

      The outcomes of mass education are similar in many emerging economies as well. China has doubled its university and college system to about 2,400 institutions in the past ten years. In 2014, China graduated 7.26 million students from its universities, seven times the number of 1999.[13] Around 9 percent of Chinese have at least some college education, twice the percentage in 2000. In 2012–2013 there were a quarter of a million Chinese students studying at American universities.[14] At present, its university graduates are facing high rates of underemployment and unemployment, since there is a misalignment of the national economy and the education provided to Chinese youth. Put simply, the country does not have enough middle-management positions or even technology-based jobs for the young people streaming out of the universities. Remember those students going overseas to get an international degree? They are referred, upon returning to China, as haigui or sea turtles, and find that their degrees are not an assured ticket to career opportunities.

      Chinese university graduates are not alone. South Korea has one of the highest university participation rates in the world (80 percent of high school graduates continue on to university). The country has some 3 million (as of 2014) inactive university graduates, because, policy-makers believe, of the oversupply of job-hungry young people. Steadily rising unemployment rates among university graduates have started to level off in Japan. But the country continues to wrestle with a massive oversupply of PhDs, many of them in the high-technology, computing, and engineering jobs that are supposed to be at the centre of the technologically-rich “new economy.” Singapore, with a robust economy, still saw graduate unemployment jump significantly, if only to 3.6 percent. Unlike other countries, however, the government responded by capping total university enrolment in Singapore at 25 percent of the high school graduating class.[15]

      Nigeria, on the other hand, with about six hundred thousand university and college students in 2010 (down substantially from three years earlier),[16] has created a system wracked by corruption, mismanagement, and low quality. About a third of school-age children are not in school. The system is so dysfunctional that alert employers and universities in other parts of the world discount Nigerian grades and credentials substantially. The situation is similar in Egypt and other North African states that bit into the golden apple of post-secondary education. They have discovered that a functioning higher education system cannot be wished into existence in the absence of a strong national infrastructure, no matter how badly their citizens want to attend university, and that in any case the regional economy cannot accommodate most of the system’s graduates.

      So, for every Israel and Finland, both advanced countries that prospered through education-driven growth, or Taiwan, Singapore, and South Korea, which built twenty-first-century economies off advanced education and training, there are others like Greece, Vietnam, India, Egypt, Zambia, Spain, South Africa, Nigeria, and Mexico that have not yet seen the growth expected from unleashing a flood of university graduates into the economy. In Portugal, the graduates from a large and academically solid university system cannot find work in the moribund national economy. Instead, they look to France, Germany, and Brazil for employment, as their working-class parents and grandparents did in earlier times. This has not stopped the expansion, however, because parents and young people alike still consider a college or university degree as the most promising—even if not assured—path to a comfortable life. The dream is international.

      The Learning = Earning Equation

      Why the enthusiasm for higher education? There are three basic reasons: first, sustained evidence that a university degree produces highly beneficial results, if not for everyone, then at least on average; second, major shifts in the industrial workforce; third, changing attitudes toward work in the contemporary world. We will discuss the first reason in detail later, but for now we note the following: there is substantial statistical evidence that students with degrees (especially if they have more than one degree) fare much better on average in the modern workforce than people who lack such degrees. Some reasons for this are obvious: doctors make more money than retail clerks and they require more than one degree in most countries; teachers generally have higher incomes than taxi drivers; and engineers enjoy better salaries than hairdressers. Those who went through

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