Misguided
by Higher Education
by
Bill Bonner
Daily Reckoning
Recently
by Bill Bonner: Back
Up, Empire!
When the financial
crisis of 2008 hit, we saw how state-managed capitalism works. Favored
companies are allowed to make as much money as they can. But they
are protected from going broke.
Certain firms
are deemed too big to fail, by virtue of the key role
they play in the economy, or at least by the role they play in a
politicians plans for re-election or future employment. But
state-managed capitalism is very different from the real thing.
It is capitalism in a degenerate form.
Real capitalism
progresses in fits and starts, described by Josef Schumpeter as
creative destruction. It is like a jungle
not like
a zoo. It cannot be managed. You cannot take out the predators or
feed selected species without upsetting the balance of nature. Take
out the destruction, and you block the creative process too.
Since the beginning
of the Industrial Revolution, most real wealth has come from real
capitalism. Not from playing the market. Not from getting
a good job. Not by trying to cadge favors from the government.
So, what is
real capitalism? It is what weve seen in the computer/Internet
industry over the last 20 years. This was a new industry. It had
not yet been tamed by the government. Regulations were few. There
were no large, entrenched companies to block start-ups. There were
no lobbyists to curry favor from the politicians. There were no
subsidies
and no barriers. It was young, dynamic, chaotic
and
very prone to blow-ups.
The whole industry
blew up in January 2000. Mistakes were not bailed out. They were
corrected. Money moved from weak hands to strong ones. Many companies
failed. The companies that survived, and prospered
went on
to glory. Amazon. Google. Microsoft. Apple.
And who was
behind these new companies? College drop-outs, computer nerds, products
of teenage mothers and broken marriages. They did not enter the
ranks of existing technology companies, work their way up to senior
management and then create new product lines. It is almost as if
they succeeded not because of advanced American capitalism, but
in spite of it. They created an entirely new industry
with
new companies nobody had ever heard of. And then, they destroyed
some of the biggest businesses in America.
Typically,
in a correction, asset prices fall and unemployment goes up. Misallocated
resources including labor needs to be re-priced and
put back to work. But when markets are not allowed to work the bid
and ask spread in the labor market can stay out of whack for years.
Joblessness becomes a structural problem, not a cyclical problem.
People do not find new jobs. Old businesses are not swept away and
new businesses do not start up.
A zoo economy
keeps the old animals alive as long as possible.
Lets
look at education. Now, theres an industry we can all
agree that adds value. You could look at it as a charitable
activity. Or as a profit-making business. Either way, education
has to be a plus for the individual and for the society, right?
Wrong on both
points. Education is only a benefit when freely floating prices
are allowed to determine what it is worth. First, let us look at
the whole industry. Since the 1960s spending on education, in raw
terms, in per capita terms, in terms adjusted for inflation, has
soared. From the 1930s, when the first careful records were compiled,
to the 1990s, real spending on education multiplied 5 times per
student. It more than doubled from the 60s.
Did this increase
in spending do any good? Not on the available evidence. Test scores
measuring achievement have not budged in 40 years.
In other words, the additional investment over the last 40 years
has been wasted. We might as well have thrown the money down a well.
But while tests
of achievement have not moved
the tests of potential achievement
have improved. For whatever reason, IQ tests and SAT tests show
young people are getting smarter
or better able to take the
tests. This may seem like good news. But not when it is set alongside
the performance tests. What we see is that the investment in education
over the last 4 decades has actually had a negative return. The
raw material was better able to learn. But the investment in the
teaching industry produced less in the way of actual learning.
Today, the
US stands out for its educational spending, as it does for the bombs
it makes and the drugs it distributes it is on the top of
the heap, by a wide margin. Spending per school aged child in the
US is about $8,000 per year. In Japan, it is half that. France is
in-between with about $6,000 spent per child per year.
Which country
has the best scores? The one that spends the least Japan.
On math tests, Americans score 474 (out of 600). The French do a
little better at 495. And the Japanese get a score of 523.
Science, the
same thing. US students get an average score of 489. Japanese students
are at 531.
There is nothing
very surprising about these figures. Nearly thirty years ago, American
researchers found that there was no connection between spending
and educational results. They just looked at different school districts
in the US. Spending was not correlated with results, they concluded.
And yet, studies
continue to show that people with more education do better in life.
We doubt these studies have much validity, at least as interpreted.
It is surely true that people with a lot of education have lower
unemployment levels and higher incomes, statistically, than those
with little formal schooling. But we have no way of knowing whether
any individual student would have been better staying in school
or
dropping out like Steve Jobs or Bill Gates.
But we will
take a guess: the typical young person would be better off getting
out in to the real world and learning as much as possible from working,
than he would by staying in school. After all, thats how almost
all the worlds great geniuses, inventors, scholars, and entrepreneurs
learned. It has only been in the last 100 years that public education
has been ubiquitous
and only in the last half a century that
ordinary people felt they should go to college. But as more people
went to college, the less dynamic
less creative
and less
productive the US economy became.
Our colleague,
Gary Gibson
puts it this way:
College is
not necessary for most people. It never was. In fact, the preoccupation
with college has left America bereft of its former ability to
create wealth.
An unhealthy
cultural myth has flourished that says everyone must go to college
and get an advanced degree, even if its something for which
there is virtually zero market demand. Meanwhile, below-market
interest rates and government-backed loans have lured a couple
generations of Americans down the road to higher education.
Further,
the kind of education colleges provide indeed, all of American
schooling from kindergarten onward doesnt produce
innovators, entrepreneurs and job creators.
In a recent
article for The New York Times titled Will Dropouts
Save America? Michael Ellsberg writes:
- American
academia is good at producing writers, literary critics and
historians. It is also good at producing professionals with
degrees. But we dont have a shortage of lawyers and professors.
America has a shortage of job creators. And the people who create
jobs arent traditional professionals, but startup entrepreneurs.
- No
business in America and therefore, no job creation
happens without someone buying something.
Wealth is
only created when value is added (You didnt think it was
when money was printed, did you?) The Austrian school of thought
reminds us that value is subjective. People, ultimately, buy whats
worth buying to them with the money theyve earned.
We cannot
put too fine a point on this. It doesnt matter what the
seller thinks the item is worth. It doesnt matter how much
time, energy and material went into making the product or service.
You can waste a lot of time, energy and material producing something
no one will want to buy. The buyer determines the ultimate value
and
whether he will part with his money for it.
There can
be misallocations of resources. And when the central bank and
government get involved, these allocations can grow very large
and go on for a very long time before violently correcting.
So it is
that, increasingly over the past couple of generations, there
has been a gross misallocation of time and resources into higher
education, aided and abetted by the central bank and the federal
government.
Millions
have been misled into pouring their young adulthood into endeavors
that wont pay off
and going deeply into debt for it.
The federal government has encouraged this higher education,
much like it did home ownership. The central bank
made the borrowing easy with low interest rates which powered
the real estate bubble as well as the higher education bubble
while government entities backed the loans.
Now the education
bubble is bursting. The bubbles start can be traced to the
GI Bill, whereby the government got into the business of shoving
more people into college than the market would bear. Over time,
the same easy loans and guarantees got extended to most of the
population.
Over time,
some bad notions gained traction. College came to be seen as the
ticket to the good life as opposed to something that people already
destined for greater things might undertake to help get them there.
As often happens, causation became confused with correlation.
In the last
30 years, higher education has come to be viewed as a human right,
something that governments are obliged to guarantee. Lost is the
notion that a higher education is a path for the exceptional,
particularly those exceptional people going into the hard sciences.
Of course,
this doesnt do anything to change the essential ability
of the people now being shoved through the system. All its
done is water down the quality of whats being offered so
that everyone can join in.
Exceptional
people still become scientists and engineers. Everyone else gets
a masters in some field that was recently invented to meet
the artificial demand for advanced degrees, for people who couldnt
be scientists or engineers, but who had a head full of misguided
notions and a boatload of borrowed money.
Worse, this
education came to supplant things like entrepreneurship,
initiative, the willingness to take risk, to accept and learn
from failure. As Ellsberg says in his article:
But
most students learn nothing about sales in college; they are more
likely to take a course on why sales (and capitalism) are evil.
Indeed. We
hate to keep turning to the Occupy movement, but it is full of
the poster children for this. They came out on the other side
of the system unemployable and in debt. They feel lost and angry,
unable to think of life past the burden of their student loans.
And many of them (not all) feel that capitalism is
somehow to blame, that the world of profits is somehow divorced
from the well-being of people.
Its
criminal when profits are doled out to banks and too
big to fail businesses by the government, with money taken
from the taxpayers. But what about the real profits not
stolen goods in which entrepreneurs take risks and business
people add value, when the profits are the reward for serving
peoples needs?
So the bamboozled
have taken to the street. They would like their student debts
to be wiped out, that the people be bailed out like
the bankers and crony big businesses were. Or even worse, they
get it in their heads that all higher education, henceforth, should
be paid for by the government. It doesnt matter whether
there is a market demand for expertise in a course of study or
not.
A system
has grown up that encouraged enormous debt for nonperforming assets,
namely, schooling in things that wont pay off. People are
still falling for it. But markets arent mocked forever.
There has to be some painful write-down in central bank-distorted
asset values before the economy can regain solid footing. This
is just as true for higher education as it is for real estate.
It wont
be pretty. Were not sure how this will play out for those
whove misallocated their time and energy based on false
signals, and with nothing but debt to show for it. But the stories
that we told ourselves about whats valuable were built on
distortions that are now coming to an end.
Reality is
asserting itself. And the reality is that entrepreneurship is
what drives wealth creation, not going into debt to be taught
that wealth creation is secondary to cultural studies or worse,
that wealth creation is downright evil.
The education
industry has been corrupted by too much easy money. It is now zombified.
Sclerotic. And parasitic. It now subtracts value. It takes valuable
resources
not the least of which are the minds and bodies of
people at their most energetic stage in life
and squanders
them, making us all poorer.
Still, parents
are terrified of the idea that their children may not get the education
that they need and may be condemned forever to the lower rungs
of the socio-economic ladder. The unemployment rate for college
graduates, for example, is only half that of the rate for the rest
of the population less than 5%, even in the high-unemployment
slump since 2008. Parents are afraid an uneducated child will not
only be a failure, but will be forced by joblessness and poverty
to move back in with mom and dad.
Yes, they will
tell you, a degree from a Podunk University in the Midwest maybe
be worthless. But get a degree from Harvard or Yale and you are
on the train to status and prosperity. They are prepared to mortgage
the house
and take out hundreds of thousands in student loans
to buy the kid a ticket.
And they may
be right. But only because the whole society has been corrupted
by the same zombie virus. It has shifted the economy from one that
cares if you can produce
to one that cares if your papers are
in order. A small businessman will not particularly care if you
have a college degree or not. He only cares if you can do the job.
But big government and the big businesses it manages are different.
They use education as a qualifier. Anyone who can sit still in class
for 16 years without questioning the nonsense that passes
for knowledge is a good candidate for bureaucracy.
What have been
the growth industries of the last 10 years? Government is the main
one. Obviously, government doesnt care if you can produce
or not. Whos measuring? Its output is un-priced. Whos
to know if you handled your paperwork well
or made the right
decision? Likewise, in the education industry, whos to know
if you are productive? What does it mean to be productive? Imagine
that you have a job at a major university. You are an assistant
director of its Local Community Outreach Program
or its Special
Gender Enabling Group
or even its Career Placement Office.
Whos to know
or care
if you are doing a good job?
All you have to do is to look and act in a presentable professional
way. The rest is BS.
In the absence
of any market-based test, you can get away with anything. All you
need is a bright smile and a good line of talk. And a college degree,
of course!
In non-market
sectors, mistakes are eventually corrected, but only
like the
Soviet Union
after decades of misery, and a final breakdown
or revolution. In the meantime, the mistakes compound. The education
industry takes more and more of the national resources while producing
less and less real output. And if you want a job, you are better
off as a well-credentialed zombie than as an energetic (often disruptive)
producer.
But what if
you were to start up a new business
a private school, with
a clear profit-oriented, market priced output? With modern e-learning
tools, you could reduce the cost of a real university education,
to a fraction of the price people currently pay.
Mr. David Van
Zandt of the New School in New York:
I apologize
to anyone here from Nebraska, but there is no reason to teach introductory
chemistry in Nebraska in a classroom of 500 students. Not when you
can pump in, say, someone from Harvard, to give the lecture
on video.
It is just
a matter of time before the cushy, over-rich education industry
meets destruction at the hands of new technology and new entrepreneurs.
But dont expect it to go gently into that good night. It has
lobbyists by the score. It has money by the billions. It has its
men and women in Washington
who will continue rewarding the
failed, zombie schools, while regulating, squeezing out and crushing
start-up competition.
Thats
why, sometimes, it takes a revolution.
October
31,
2011
Bill
Bonner is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
The New Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis
and the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007). His
latest book is Dice
Have No Memory.
Since 1999, Bill has been a daily contributor and the driving force
behind The Daily Reckoning.
Copyright
© 2011 Daily Reckoning
The
Best of Bill Bonner
|