Lord Bilimoria
has opened up to declare that the Budget should invest more in Higher
Education. Checking the bio' in
Wikipedia says that he has been top man for the Indian firm Cobra Beer.
Memory tells
me that students tend to drink a lot of beer.
This is what people call a "vested interest" and suggests that
this member of our new nobility is doing a bit of lobbying on the side.
The bigger
question is "what do you mean by "investment" but I will skip
the deep analysis of the many meanings of this word. When it comes to politicians who are also in
big business you may assume that to them it is what they say it is, especially
when from wealthy families with a military background.
A more sober look at the economics of Higher Education (HE) by The
Mises Institute says that in recent decades the HE spending has created a
bubble that is still inflating. Bubbles
create winners and losers and bad bubbles mean a lot of very bad losers. This rule seems to apply just as much to HE
as anything else.
This article
relates to the USA, but the essential principles apply in any state where HE
has been expanded rapidly as a matter of social policy and as a means of
reducing unemployment among the young.
In general it has not been challenged because it is seen as
"good".
There is an
inherent difficulty in that the HE has been expanded on the basis of work
structures and technology of the recent past.
But change has been so rapid that much of the HE now on offer relates to
that past meaning that many qualifying are left with skills for which there is
either none or a reducing market.
If what we see
and hear are any guide it is not going to get any better, if anything it is
getting much worse. There are fiasco's at present in other sectors. The UK government has a lot to say about
apprenticeships and training for the non HE sector.
But the huge changes
involving Ofqual, the awarding agencies and the trainers now current are going
to result in thousands under training being deemed as failures because the
computer systems cannot transfer personal details from one new system to
another.
To return to
HE, a major feature of current UK provision is the number of overseas students
imported for financial reasons as much as anything. One major source is India.
So Lord Bilimoria is wanting us to inflate the HE sector more rapidly on that basis to deal with the overseas students, many from India, at a time when the actual reality of the labour markets is that most of them will never realise any economic benefit.
So Lord Bilimoria is wanting us to inflate the HE sector more rapidly on that basis to deal with the overseas students, many from India, at a time when the actual reality of the labour markets is that most of them will never realise any economic benefit.
Who are losers
as well as the masses of unlucky young saddled with debt and no prospects
having lost years of potential real work experience and other
opportunities? The UK taxpayers are one
and more HE along with the import of students is a part of the other major
bubble, property, in that whole districts of many place are now student
enclaves.
The fortunes
of the noble Lord are likely to be invested in more than the beer firm or old
family assets. Could some of them, I
wonder be in property and perhaps buy to let?
Good point - the rapid expansion of HE with no corresponding accommodation development has opened the door to exploitation on a dramatic scale.
ReplyDeleteWhere once students were housed in manages halls of residence at minimal rent, even first years are left to take their chances on the open market through commercial agencies. The end result has been to inflate rents in deprived areas - our sons paid much the same despite one living in a property hotspot and the other in a town notorious for low incomes and unemployment. This means either massive student debts or huge housing benefit bills for the taxpayer - and a nice little earner for BtL landlords.
It might be better if more students went in for part time education.
ReplyDeleteLikewise for the staff. One of the better profs at my tech would spend half his time in industry picking up the newest info.
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