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April 14, 2007
Misunderstanding
Higher Education
by Gary North, Ph.D.
Other
than "misunderstanding America's divorce laws," I
cannot think of any more expensive widely shared
misunderstanding than "misunderstanding higher
education." The higher the degree, the greater the
misunderstanding.
My views on earning a bachelor's degree for
pennies on the dollar are
posted here.
Recently, I was sent a question regarding a
career decision. It came from a man who described
his situation as follows:
- Age: 23, location: Seattle; occupation:
account executive for medical supply sales
company; annual income: $40-50k; wife of 4
months, 20, homemaker, pregnant with first child
due in September; net worth: zero; debt: $3500
credit card debt, $60k student loan debt.
He is not typical. First, his income is probably
100% higher than a typical recent college
graduate's income. Second, his level of
college-related debt is three times higher.
He is in sales. This is why he has a high
income. But the unique skills that he possesses he
possessed years ago: sales skills. He did not gain
these skills in college, where he was taught by
salary-drawing bureaucrats who may not make any
more money at age 50 than he does at age 23.
Had he been aware of my college strategy, he
would have had his B.A. degree by age 20, and he
would not owe a dime. He would have paid for his
college education with the income he earned by
working part-time at McDonald's. My strategy
involves paying no more than $11 per day. But
nobody told him or his parents that there was a
better way.
THE COST OF GRADUATE SCHOOL
People rarely count the full cost of making
career-altering decisions. They may think they are
counting the cost, but they don't know really how
to do this.
Here are a series of questions to get answered
before you even apply to graduate school.
- 1. Do I have a clear career goal for age 30?
Age 40? Age 65?
- 2. Does this career goal unquestionably
mandate a specific degree above the B.A.?
If so,
- 1. Will any employer finance all or part of
this degree program at night school if I go on
salary immediately?
- 2. If not, can I finance myself by attending
night school or by distance learning?
- 3. Which will cost me less money: (1) I
attend school full time and work part-time, or
(2) I work full time and earn the degree part
time? (Time value of money vs. money value of
time.)
If the degree is not required,
- 1. Why am I considering staying out of the
job market for another two to five years?
- 2. What will this cost me in forfeited money
income after taxes?
- 3. How much money would I have at age 65 if
I were to invest 30% of this forfeited income at
6% per annum in a Roth IRA?
This dollars-and-cents assessment does not
include costs imposed on spouses, or on oneself for
not marrying younger. These may be the highest
costs of all.
OCCUPATION VS. CALLING
I return to this theme over and over.
Calling: "The most important thing you can do in
which you would be most difficult to replace."
Occupation: "Whatever you do to finance your
calling."
Only a few callings are occupations. Teaching
can be a calling-occupation. But I know people who
have spent their careers teaching in tax-funded
schools who are prohibited by law from teaching
what they really believe about God, man, ethics,
cause and effect, and the future. They have sold
their birthrights for a mess of pottage. They have
abandoned their callings for the sake of their
occupation. This is always a bad decision.
If you cannot locate anyone to pay you to pursue
your calling, or not pay you much, then you must
make a trade-off in time: calling vs.
occupation.
If you decide to make this trade-off, you
probably will not get rich. To get rich in most
cases involves starting your own business and
working 12x6 for twenty or thirty years in that
business. Unless your business is your calling,
great success in your business will cost you your
calling.
Let me give you an example of someone who
achieved both:
- George Grote. In the mid-nineteenth century,
he was a banker at the family firm: Grote,
Prescott & Co. He began writing at age 25.
He never stopped. He wrote on political issues
initially. Then he began writing his "History of
Greece," which I have in four small-type
volumes, but is more readable in the 12-volume
set that my father-in-law owned. This project
took Grote over 11 years. He also wrote three
volumes on Socrates and Plato. He is not
remembered for his banking skills. He understood
this at the time.
So, when you look at earning an advanced degree,
think to yourself: "Is this required for my
occupation or my calling?"
CERTIFICATION AND
CARTELIZATION
In most cases, a degree is required only for
your occupation. This is true mainly of occupations
that are regulated by the government: CPA, lawyer,
physician, dentist, etc. This is because there is a
cartel operating. The cartel exists through
government intervention, which restricts
supply.
Cartels break down over time. The longer an
employment cartel operates, the more the supply of
certified members increases. Why? Because the
cartels get the government to establish standards
&endash; designed by the cartel's academic
committee -- to license degree-granting
institutions.
Then the government extends its power over the
cartel by authorizing one or more of its tax-funded
universities the authority to create
degree-granting graduate programs that offer
cartel-approved training. The cartel can hardly
bite the hand that feeds it: the state. It
therefore accepts this intrusion into its
certification problem, which is in fact a
deliberate restriction of the supply of competing
professionals.
The tax-funded university then changes the rules
governing the cartel's initial strategy. The goal
of professors is to increase the number of
students. They get paid by the number of students
taught. So, the degree-granting institutions flood
the cartel with newly certified candidates. The
supply increases, so wages fall.
This happened to the Ph.D. degree in 1969. It
then happened in the legal profession and the
medical profession. Lawyers are a dime a dozen
these days. Physicians are more expensive: a dime a
half dozen. I can walk into a local clinic and pay
$50 for treatment. I mean this literally: walk.
There is a walk-in clinic a couple of blocks away.
There is another one a few blocks from that
one.
- [Actually, I can't walk in and pay $50.
That's because I am a ward of the state. I am on
Medicare. I am not legally allowed to pay $50.
The clinic has to put up with a co-payment
system. I pay $25, and it bills Medicare for the
rest. Then it waits. And waits. And
waits.]
Wal-Mart is considering renting space to walk-in
clinics, just as it rents space to optometrists.
Guess where patients of these clinics are likely to
purchase their prescriptions? Right next door to
where they order their eyeglasses.
If you seek certification rather than education
in higher education, expect to see your rate of
return to fall. There are now few effective limits
on the supply of new competitors. The tax-funded
degree-granting programs are cranking out your
future competitors.
EDUCATION, NOT CERTIFICATION
"But," some bright young person objects, "I'm
not in this for certification. I just want an
education." Ah, purity of motive! That, plus $5,
will buy you a cup of coffee at Starbucks.
I refer such idealistic people to Good
Will Hunting. My favorite scene in
the movie is where he confronts a Harvard hot shot
in a bar. The guy tries to impress him with his
graduate school-level understanding of American
history. Will blows him apart in the footnote
competition. He then tells him that he has paid a
fortune for an education that he could have
received with a library card at the Boston public
library.
The higher you go in formal education, the less
you rely on teachers and classrooms. Once you make
it beyond your written exams and qualify for the
Ph.D. dissertation, you rarely see your advisor,
and you never have to see anyone else on the
faculty. You're on your own. Sink or swim. Root hog
or die.
The only logical justification for graduate
school for education is this: you need a teacher to
guide you. But if you are really ready to do
significant work, why do you need this? What is
your problem?
A person can obtain a course's reading list
on-line. Most professors post these on-line. If
not, write to the departments in the major
universities and ask for a copy of the department's
recommended reading list for the M.A. degree. If
one of them wants to charge you postage, mail back
a check for whatever the secretary asks.
Next, write to the senior men in your chosen
field, university by university. Ask for their
recommended reading lists. Ask also for each man's
list of published materials. Nobody from outside
the academic world ever pays attention to these
people. Most of them will cooperate.
You now have lots of reading lists. You also
have free interlibrary loan privileges at your
local public library. You have Amazon, with its
used book options.
Why do you need a university? If all you want is
a good education, the only excuse for attending a
university is that you need academic hand-holding.
Read a hundred books in your field, and you won't
need hand-holding.
If you need a structured environment to learn --
tests, deadlines, grades -- then you are not ready
for graduate school. You are too immature
academically.
WRITE YOUR WAY IN
If you are not good enough to write your way
into your calling, then you need to read more. Then
you need to write more.
Start a blog. It's free. Start
here.
You can create a website after you have mastered
blogging.
Begin with posting book reviews. Then, after a
hundred or two hundred published book reviews,
start writing annotated bibliographies.
Once you have put a large number of reviews
on-line, start specializing in one topic. Create
another blog site. Keep up to date with whatever is
going on inside this field. Do handy summaries of
the latest publications.
Save readers time. People want to save time.
They want others to do their leg work for them.
Word will get out if you're any good.
Then write a book. It need not be creative. It
can merely introduce newcomers to a field. Post it
on your blog site for free in PDF format.
Make copies available in printed format by using
Print on Demand technology. If you can get sales, a
third-party publisher may pick it up.
The book becomes a calling card in your career
plan.
Then write another. Write enough books in a
field, and you will establish your reputation. Even
self-published books are impressive to a
prospective employer.
Add CD-ROMs, screencasts on YouTube, and
DVDs.
This was how I made my reputation. I started
writing for The Freeman magazine and a dozen
other magazines to put myself through graduate
school. My Freeman articles got me my first
full-time job: at the Foundation for Economic
Education, which published The Freeman.
My Ph.D. degree got me nothing. I never had a
single job offer based on my degree. I even wrote
my way into the one full-time academic job I ever
had. It was in a different field from my
degree.
CONCLUSION
If you need certification, try to get your
employer to pay for it. If you can't do this, then
get certified by distance learning. If that's not
possible, then consider grad school. But be
prepared: you will be giving up years of
irreplaceable time for a degree that will fall in
value steadily because of the oversupply of
candidates that tax-funded education inevitably
produces.
If you need education for your calling, imitate
Will Hunting. Get a library card.
Gary
North Archive
Dr.
Gary North earned a Ph.D. in history and is one of
America's keenest economic analysts and
commentators. He supports the Austrian school of
economics and is a previous assistant to
libertarian congressman Dr. Ron Paul. Visit his
website at http://garynorth.com.
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subscribe to Gary North's Reality Check go to
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