Posted on 04/01/2013 6:04:49 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
We need to invest more in college education so that college graduates can get jobs that don’t require college degrees while paying off piles of student debt for an unnecessary college degree.
And that will help our colleges pay off their massive burden of debt. Welcome to the Obama Economy. (via Instapundit)
The recession left millions of college-educated Americans working in coffee shops and retail stores. Now, new research suggests their job prospects may not improve much when the economy rebounds.
Underemploymentskilled workers doing jobs that don’t require their level of educationhas been one of the hallmarks of the slow recovery. By some measures, nearly half of employed college graduates are in jobs that don’t traditionally require a college degree.
Economists have generally assumed the problem was temporary: As the economy improved, companies would need more highly educated employees. But in a paper released Monday by the National Bureau of Economic Research, a team of Canadian economists argues that the U.S. faces a longer-term problem.
They found that unlike the 1990s, when companies needed hundreds of thousands of skilled workers to develop, build and install high-tech systemseverything from corporate intranets to manufacturing robotsdemand for such skills has fallen in recent years, even as young people continued to flock to programs that taught them.
The problem isn’t just high tech skills. America does need more technical grads in some professions, unfortunately those professions are also glutted by low quality Third World students.
Meanwhile American students are wasting piles of money on unemployable non-technical degrees.
Brian Hackett, who graduated with honors from the College of New Jersey in 2010 with a political-science degree, is among those who haven’t found full-time work. Instead, the 25 year old works part-time doing clerical work and conducting phone interviewsand he is hardly the only one at his company with advanced credentials.
“There are people with master’s degrees and bachelor’s degrees and even people with law degrees applying to work for $10 an hour,” Mr. Hackett said.
Well yes. Not exactly all that surprising. There’s a lawyer surplus and political science is a chancy specialty.
Better-educated workers still face far better job prospects than their less-educated counterparts. The unemployment rate for Americans with at least a bachelor’s degree was 3.8% in February, compared with 7.9% for those with just a high school diploma.
This slops together all degree holders. The actual unemployment stats are 4.5 for BA holders and 3.5 for MA holders. High school grad unemployment does top 8 percent, but student loan debt more than makes up for the difference in incomes.
And some degrees have whopping unemployment rates that are worse than those of High School dropouts.
Even pre-law has an unemployment rate almost as bad as High School grads.
I am one who believes that, in a better world, a BA was worth having for its own sake. Not today. I met an MA in English who never studied a play of Shakespeare. When I got my BA, I at least was familiar with all his works, and learned a few in great depth. Read the Romantics, Victorians, Classics like Poe and Dryden.
But a BA was also much less expensive for me than for the people now! The cost of studying your culture, just because it was worth studying, was in the loss of earning power for three or four years.
A classical education, or a good Great Books type program, can be a great thing. Most “liberal arts” programs nowadays simply don’t measure up. and are thus mostly a waste of time and $
Married an army medic, 2 kids and now works for the IRS.
And Germany does not offer advanced degrees in fields like engineering without time in the profession producing an employer recommendation before being eligible to apply.
True story. Back in the late 70s when I was in grad school at the U of Wisc in Madison, I took a cab ride home. The driver had a Ph. D. In medieval European philosophy. He was sure that eventually he would get a professorship at a good university. After someone retired or died. He'd been driving for almost five years.
“I am one who believes that, in a better world, a BA was worth having for its own sake. Not today. I met an MA in English who never studied a play of Shakespeare.”
Yup. I got a BS in zoology, and then later got an MA in English(TESL). Over the last 30 years, I’ve been amazed at the decline in variety and volume of writing that English majors must read. Oprah’s book club seems to be about the most taxing level of understanding that the youngest teachers I met needed to get their degrees, even at the master’s level.
“Hey Hey Ho Ho Western Civ has got to go.”
Be careful what you ask for, you just might get it.
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