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The
Higher-Education Bubble Has Popped
by
Doug French
Recently
by Doug French: Paper
Money Wears Prada
A college degree
once looked to be the path to prosperity. In an article
for TechCrunch, Sarah Lacy writes, "Like the housing bubble,
the education bubble is about security and insurance against the
future. Both whisper a seductive promise into the ears of worried
Americans: Do this and you will be safe."
But the jobs
that made higher education pay off during the inflationary boom,
kicked into high gear by Nixon waving goodbye to the last shreds
of a gold standard, came primarily from government and finance.
In 1990, 6.4
million people worked for federal, state, and local governments.
By 2010, that number had grown almost 6 times to 38.3 million
with many of these jobs being white-collar.
In 1990, the
financial sector was less than 7.5 percent of the S&P 500. By
2006, this sector had grown to 22.3 percent of the S&P, and
that year the financial sector constituted 45 percent of the index's
earnings.
"Prices
and wage rates boom," writes Mises.
Everybody
feels happy and is convinced that now finally mankind has overcome
forever the gloomy state of scarcity and reached everlasting prosperity.
In fact,
all this amazing wealth is fragile, a castle built on sands of
illusion. It cannot last. There is no means to substitute banknotes
and deposits for nonexistent capital goods.
Times have
changed.
Last week,
HSBC Holding Plc
announced plans to eliminate 30,000 jobs worldwide by the end of
2013. The job cuts will affect "support staff where we believe
we have created an unnecessary bureaucracy in this firm over a number
of years," HSBC chief executive officer Stuart Gulliver said.
Goldman Sachs
plans to cut 1,000 positions. Bank of America is laying off 1,500
employees and closing 600 retail branches.
At the same
time that banks are trimming their fat, according to a Labor Department
report released earlier this month, from May 2010 to May 2011 local
governments shed 267,000 jobs and state governments 24,000. Local
government employment in May, at 14.165 million jobs, was the lowest
since July 2006.
An increase
in the amount of real savings, which induces a fall in the interest
rate and a lengthening of the production schedule, increases an
economy's productive capacity, creating genuine growth brought about
by the investment in higher-order goods such as factories and other
production assets.
Conversely,
easy, cheap credit fools entrepreneurs into believing that society's
collective time preference has fallen, enticing them into investing
in higher-order goods, such as land, factories, and the like
when in fact the collective time preference hasn't changed, and
the demand for higher-order goods is merely a mirage. The result
is booms and busts rather than genuine growth.
College degrees
are similar to what the Austrians call higher-order goods. It's
thought that a student will gain knowledge and seasoning in college
that will make him or her more productive and a candidate for a
high-paying career. The investment of time and money in knowledge
pays through higher productivity and is translated into higher income.
Higher education is the higher-order means to a successful career.
PayPal founder
and early Facebook investor Peter Thiel, questioning the value of
higher education, tells TechCrunch,
A true bubble
is when something is overvalued and intensely believed. Education
may be the only thing people still believe in in the United States.
To question education is really dangerous. It is the absolute
taboo. It's like telling the world there's no Santa Claus.
The excesses
of both college and homeownership were always excused by a core
national belief that, no matter what happens in the world, these
were the best investments you could make. Housing prices would always
go up, and you will always make more money if you are college educated.
The New
York Times' David Leonhardt even claims,
Construction
workers, police officers, plumbers, retail salespeople and secretaries,
among others, make significantly more with a degree than without
one. Why? Education helps people do higher-skilled work, get jobs
with better-paying companies or open their own businesses.
Using data
from the Center on Education and the Workforce at Georgetown University,
Leonhardt asserts that dishwashers with college degrees make $34,000
a year while those without make $19,000.
No employer
in their right mind would pay nearly double for a dishwasher with
a college degree. However, there are plenty of fresh college graduates
cobbling together multiple low-level jobs just to make ends meet.
"More
college graduates are working in second jobs that don't require
college degrees," writes
Hannah Seligson in the New York Times, "part of a phenomenon
called 'mal-employment.' In short, many baby-sitters, sales clerks,
telemarketers and bartenders are overqualified for their jobs."
Nearly 2 million
college graduates were mal-employed last year, up 17 percent from
2007. Nearly half of all college graduates are working at a job
not requiring a degree.
In the United
States, 80,000 bartenders as well as 317,000 waiters and waitresses
have college degrees. Nearly a quarter of all retail salespersons
have a college degree. In all, 17 million Americans with college
degrees are working
at jobs that do not require a bachelor's degree.
"Young
college graduates working multiple jobs is a natural consequence
of a bad labor market and having, on average, $20,000 worth of student
loans to pay off," said Carl E. Van Horn, director of the
John
J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers.
"The median
starting salary for those who graduated from four-year degree programs
in 2009 and 2010 was $27,000, down from $30,000 for those who graduated
in 2006 to 2008, before the recession," Seligson writes, adding,
"Try living on $27,000 a year before taxes in
a city like New York, Washington or Chicago."
Like all booms,
higher education has been fueled by credit. In June of last year,
total student-loan debt exceeded total credit-card debt outstanding
for the first time, totaling
more than $900 billion.
All of this
credit has pushed the average cost of tuition up 440 percent in
the last 25 years, more than four times the rate of inflation. But
while the factors of production on campus have been bid up, just
as they are in any other asset boom, the return on investment is
a bust. In 1992, there were 5.1 million mal-employed college graduates.
By 2008, the number was 17 million.
Not only are
the returns poor, but the quality of the product is poor (as in
the case of new-construction quality in the housing boom). According
to the authors of Academically
Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses, 45 percent
of students make no gains in their critical reasoning and thinking
skills, as well as writing ability, after two years in college.
More than one out of three college seniors were no better at writing
and thinking than they were when they first arrived at their campuses.
Many projects
contemplated and started during the real-estate boom are never completed,
as prices are bid up, and owners run out of capital. Such is the
case for many attending college, as over 45 percent of those who
enroll as freshmen ultimately give up, realizing they lack the disciplinary
and mental capital, and do not graduate.
Similar to
the government push for increased homeownership, government is foursquare
behind having more young people attend universities. One of President
Obama's top goals is to increase the number of Americans attending
college.
But why? "Among
the members of the class of 2010, just 56 percent had held at least
one job by this spring, when the survey was conducted," reported
the Times recently. "That compares with 90 percent of
graduates from the classes of 2006 and 2007."
And because
they can't find jobs, 85
percent of college grads move back in with their parents after
they graduate. According to a poll by Twentysomething Inc., a marketing
and research firm based in Philadelphia, that rate has steadily
risen from 67 percent in 2006.
Perversely,
while the market tries to clear away malinvestments in finance and
real estate, plus the jobs that supported them, colleges continue
to turn out more business majors than any other discipline. In 2007
and 2008 there were more than 335,000 business degrees granted
100,000 more than a decade before, according
to the National Center for Education Statistics.
At the same
time as law schools have a building boom underway, many new law
grads can't find work or are working temporary jobs at $15 an hour.
David
Segal reports
for The New York Times,
As other
industries close offices and downsize plants, the manufacturing
base behind the doctor of jurisprudence keeps growing. Fordham
Law School in New York recently broke ground on a $250 million,
22-story building. The University of Baltimore School of Law and
the University of Michigan Law School are both working on buildings
that cost more than $100 million. Marquette University Law School
in Wisconsin has just finished its own $85 million project. A
bunch of other schools have built multimillion dollar additions.
And while law
grads can't find work, law schools are enrolling more students than
ever before at tuition rates of $40,000+ a year. Segal explains
that law-school tuition has increased at 4 times the rate of undergraduate
education, which itself has increased 4 times the CPI. "From
1989 to 2009, when college tuition rose by 71 percent, law school
tuition shot up 317 percent."
Students and
their parents are investing in the higher-order good of a college
degree, in the mistaken belief that plenty of jobs await college
graduates at the end of four or six or seven years. However, time
preferences haven't changed. The demand for consumer goods remains,
and that's where the jobs are. The boom in demand for bankers, barristers,
and bureaucrats is over.
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
August
13, 2011
Doug
French [send him mail]
is president of the Ludwig von Mises
Institute and
the author of Early
Speculative Bubbles & Increases in the Money Supply.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies. See his tribute to
Murray Rothbard.

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