Jay wrote:
Bertster7 wrote:
Jay wrote:
Oh, ok, how about government funding only for pre-approved degrees? The government should set quotas for every degree amirite?
Why is your solution always more governmental interference to solve prior government interference?
It's not.
My solution is to raise the bar academically. In a privatised system this is unlikely to happen naturally as it would reduce profits by shrinking the market.
We agree degrees are devalued. There is one way to increase their value, give out less of them.
When it comes to giving out less of them, then you can either choose to charge more for them (pricing the bottom end out of the market) or you can increase academic standards so fewer people are capable of obtaining them (ending up with only the best of the best academically). Is it better to have graduates being the richest students or the brightest ones?
The brightest have, and will always be able to attend college. Colleges pay them to attend via scholarship in order to increase prestige.
Yeah of course, because scholarship students make up a significant enough proportion of the population to have a really substantial impact.
Also, whilst you've repeatedly blamed government hand outs and socialisation of the system for the rising costs, you have yet to address the fact that in countries where this is more heavily socialised, costs are rising more slowly (also seen in other sectors). How do you maintain your position and account for this?