one-eyed_jim":53mz2tde said:
JohnH":53mz2tde said:
A 17-year-old is in a much better position to influence the national economy by choosing a productive degree course than by throwing placards at policemen -- something that seems to be lost on the demonstrators.
Caricature aside, I don't think that's necessarily true. Relatively small numbers of protestors can sometimes have a disproportionately large influence on public opinion.
Jim, the country isn't short of public opinion, the country's short of
money. That's why the demonstrations took place. The country can't afford to carry the cost of the massive number of young people who now study at a university. And the demonstrators don't like having the cost of their own education handed to them when they graduate. Public opinion can do what it likes -- the country will still be short of money. If those youngsters genuinely want to improve that situation, they should do something that makes money for the country. Throwing placards at policemen and ransacking office blocks doesn't make money -- in fact, clearing up the mess
costs money.
So I'm arguing that an increase in the number of maths, science and engineering graduates will improve the country's chances of making money and repairing our economic situation.
one-eyed_jim":53mz2tde said:
If the result of choosing a "productive" degree course is that the graduate finds work overseas (like my physicist friends, and as is increasingly the case for science and engineering graduates) the net benefit to the UK economy isn't likely to be great.
Good point. The British taxpayer would have spent money on the student, but got no "payback" in return.
one-eyed_jim":53mz2tde said:
It doesn't have to be directly related to their course. I'm not arguing that the country only benefits when physics graduates get physics jobs. I'm saying that in the 21st century, people with an understanding of maths/science/technology stand a greater chance of making a financial contribution to the country (and its dwindling universities budget) than someone who chooses to study some self-indulgent arts/humanities course.
That's quite a narrow view of the situation. Britain's economy is service-dominated, and service industries need all kinds of skills, not just technical ones.
Yes, Britain's economy is service-dominated. And yes, service industries need all kinds of skills. There's just one problem: we can't export services.
The girl who cuts my hair or the neighbour who drives a taxi can't bring foreign revenue into this country because they can't offer their services to customers in Canberra or Calgary. Now before anyone loses their rag with me; yes, I know that we need hairdressers and taxi drivers. But the fact that our economy is service-
dominated is one of the reasons why our country is slipping down the economic league table.
one-eyed_jim":53mz2tde said:
When I graduated in mechanical engineering, my first job was not as an engineer, but as a technical author for a small electric motor company. But, I couldn't have got the job if I hadn't known how to read & create engineering drawings, been comfortable with numbers and formulae and had a good grasp of how to use computers to create technical literature. My engineering qualifications gave me those skills.
One of the main justifications for preferring graduate employees is for their supposed transferable skills - in research, self-education, general literacy etc. You found your technical skills useful in a technical field, but most graduate jobs aren't technical in nature. A service-dominated economy needs linguists, writers, organisers, and any number of versatile, educated dogsbodies just as much as it needs mathematicians, scientists and engineers. It also needs to feed, house, clothe, entertain and educate its population.
Again, everything you've said is perfectly true, Jim. But here's the thrust of my argument: We
shouldn't have a service-dominated economy. The service-dominated economy has got us where we are today; horrendously in debt with an appalling trade deficit. As James Dyson said: "Only one in seven British jobs is in manufacturing, yet they generate nearly two-thirds of exports."
I believe that if we produced more people who knew how to invent, design and manufacture, our universities wouldn't be churning out "transferrable skilled" employees for the service sector -- it would be mass-producing enterprising and innovative
employers for the manufacturing sector.
New companies would appear that could sell energy production technology, energy efficiency technology, computer technology, biotechnology and alternative-fuel automotive technology to the rest of the world. We would export our products and make money again! We would employ more people and reduce the dole queues....
Oh, I'm getting all excited now. I'd better go and take my Sanatogen...