We see plenty of unemployed people with advanced educational degrees today. Want to meet someone with a master’s in English or art? Check behind the counter at Starbuck’s. Those people are pretty angry.
On the other hand, we have companies begging for highly skilled workers who are nowhere to be found. Why is there such a disconnect between what people are trained for and what the market needs?
Some would say it’s a market failure and that we need some kind of system to co-ordinate job training and education. Instead, it’s what happens when you let government rig the incentive structure, even with the best of intentions.
For something like 60 years, government has made it easy to go to college and has taught people that a college degree is the ticket to a good life. Going to college to get an undergraduate degree (or more) has been subsidized and propagandized, so that’s what people do — far out of proportion to its necessity.
Want to return to a simpler world? Say ‘goodbye’ to cheeseburgers
How would we see the gang war in Texas if the faces had been black?
If you don’t feel overwhelmed, you just aren’t paying attention
Are you ready for chaos when fed shutdown turns your gravity off?
Bernanke: Recovery ‘faltering,’ so let’s do more of what hasn’t worked
She’s miserable in life she chose, but she’s too proud to change now
Cancer diagnosis forces you to decide what really matters in life
Ignorant economic reporting doesn’t help an equally ignorant public
Before you can rescue other folks, you have to learn to save yourself