Sunday, November 12, 2017

The Economic Effects of a Schooled Generation

*originally written 08/31/16*

In my original writing of this piece, I discussed seven different effects of mandatory public schooling on the economy. However, the full exposition was necessarily lengthy and, in an effort to keep my articles within a reasonable word count, I was forced to reduce the scope of this piece. All this to say that, although I only talk about two more-often-overlooked effects, I am not unaware of other issues like actual money costs, limits on workforce participation, and degree inflation (partially discussed elsewhere).

The first issue I’d like to address is the public schools’ attack on diversity. In rhetoric, certainly, schools appear to praise the existence of diversity. However, diversity simply means “the existence of difference,” and schools systematically attempt to eliminate the differences between their students. Schools assume that everyone starts out with the same knowledge and abilities, assumes that everyone learns and develops at the same pace, and, by teaching everyone the same material, attempts to create a population where everyone has the same knowledge and skills.

This is, in effect, an attack on the division of labor. Economic growth is based on social cooperation, which is, in turn, based on recognition of two fundamental economic principles: The Inequality of Nature and The Law of Association (more commonly known as the Law of Comparative Advantage). The Inequality of Nature means that every individual has different preferences, laboring abilities, and resources upon which to labor. The Law of Association states that when people specialize in the work that they’re relatively better at (the type of labor with the smallest opportunity cost for them) and then trade the product of their work for the product of others who also specialized in the work that they were relatively better at, productivity is increased and all parties are made better off. Social cooperation and economic growth are not about having more people who can work together to create bigger things; they are about having more different people who can exploit their differences to increase total production of many different things. Hayek put it like this: “It is, then, not simply more men, but more different men, which brings an increase in productivity. Men have become powerful because they have become so different: new possibilities of specialization – depending not so much on any increase in individual intelligence but on growing differentiation of individuals – provide the basis for a more successful use of the earth’s resources.”

Differences, in knowledge, in skills, in inclinations, are therefore valuable to an economy. By attempting to eliminate (or at least severely limit the development of) these differences, public schools weaken the very foundations of our division-of-labor-based economy. They therefore limit the pace and extent of economic growth, resulting in a lower standard of living for all.

The second issue that I’d like to write about is the schooled mindset and its contribution to the decline in entrepreneurship. Now, there is a myth being spread in this country that tons of young people are starting their own businesses and becoming entrepreneurs. Unfortunately, it’s only a myth. According to data from the Federal Reserve, less than 4% of adults under 30 own stakes in private companies, down from more than 10% in 1990. There are many reasons for this trend: increased regulation, taxes, occupational licensing, and student debt. However, I believe that another major contributing factor is the psychological effects of spending 12-16 years in school.

To clarify, an entrepreneur is an individual who begins producing a good today knowing that it will only be of use at some future date, but not knowing what the value of the good will be at that future date. His uncertainty is what sets him apart; he produces for tomorrow without knowing what tomorrow will need. If his predictions are accurate, he will make a profit. If not, he will suffer a loss. A successful entrepreneur, then, makes a profit by correctly predicting a future change in demand and by acting to meet this future demand. Moreover, he must foresee this change more clearly than his fellow industrialists, who would otherwise also move to meet the future demand and bid away the entrepreneur’s profits.

In light of our preceding discussion on schools’ attack on diversity, we can easily see one way that schooling hurts entrepreneurship. By reducing differences between students and by forcing them all to learn the same material, schools make it difficult for students to think independently and plan for the future in ways different than their peers. However, schools do much worse than this: they create a mindset in their students that excludes entrepreneurial tendencies.

Schools encourage conformity. To succeed in school is to do exactly what you’re told to do, to meet or exceed the expectations on a standardized rubric. If you try something else different, you run the risk of “failing.” Outside of the classroom the situation is quite similar. To be a success in the social scene of the school, one must emulate one’s peers as much as possible, up to and including one’s hairstyle.

Schools also encourage passivity. Students sit passively at their desks all day long, with raw information being fed to them. They passively do their homework like they’re told, using the methods that they’re taught. They passively cycle through the school system, one grade at a time, taking the various subjects in the order that they’re prescribed. They passively apply to college in their senior year, without much thought of alternatives. And, when they’re done with college, they passively send out their resumes and wait for someone to call them back and just give them a good job. The schooling system assures students that it will take care of everything, and the students passively accept this. 

Finally, schools encourage a submissive, permission-based mindset. One cannot offer an opinion on a subject unless he is an expert. The teacher always knows better. The student cannot do or build anything with his knowledge until the teacher decides that he knows everything he needs to know (through testing) to do so. If the choices are A through D, the answer cannot be E. Everything is pass/fail; there is no way to grade “different.” Everything is planned by someone else and assigned. Students are conditioned to sit quietly, raise their hands when they wish to speak, ask permission to go to the bathroom, and accept the teacher’s views as authoritative.

Through all of this mental warping, by encouraging conformity, passivity, and submissiveness, schools reduce their students’ creative and entrepreneurial capacities. This hurts our economy by reducing our ability to envision and create a better future, resulting in a reduction in everyone’s living standards from what they might have been. 

These are just two ways in which mandatory public schooling hurts our economy (by hurting our children). There are other ways that they hurt the economy (at least five) and, while any one of them might have a small effect on the economy (though doubtful), together they no doubt have a quite substantial effect. This is not to say that public schooling has no economic benefits; it does. However, it is in no way conclusive that schools are an economic boon on net. In fact, when we consider the possibility of a free market in education providing all of the benefits and none of the disadvantages of the government version, it seems all the more likely that the opposite is true.

J22b - Question Journal: Liu's EMC Art

After reviewing the thinking and artwork of Julia Liu through her EMC2 website, I have generated the following questions in the hopes of providing a challenging new perspective that will help her grow and further develop her already-impressive project.
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When did you begin creating art? Why did you start? Why do you continue? What role does art play in your life, currently? Why didn’t you give your October collaborators a theme to work within? Why do you think it’s important to have a theme? Why is it important to have a distinctive style? Do you think that you’re work this year has helped develop your own style? Could a search for your own style be related to your theme of identity? Isn’t a sense of constraint also related to identity? What exactly do you mean by identity? 


Why is art important? What is the purpose of art? What role does it play in the human experience? What is the purpose of your project? What do you hope to accomplish? What will your end product be? Why should the rest of us care (so what)? What does your art say about you? What about you made you choose this project?


Will you be using other mediums soon? Will you do any more digital art? Will you do a sculpture? Does a lot of practice in one medium or in one style translate into better skill in other mediums or styles? Could you do a piece where different parts were done in a different medium? What would that say about identity? What would your idea about a canvas of unfinished pieces say about identity? How can you show progress, beyond demonstrating better technique? 

How have you addressed your frustrations and surprises with your October collaborators? How will you collaborate moving forward? How can your art contribute to other students' projects? Who is your audience/stakeholders? Is the community that you want to involve bigger than GHS? Who’s art do you look up to?

Do you find questions useful for your project? In what way are are questions useful for you?  How does your project present an argument, a truth-claim about the world? What are you saying with your project? Why should we listen? Why should we believe you? Why do you care? How will your experiences with this project affect you in the future?

Friday, November 3, 2017

J22a - Questions Journal: Goes' Market Environmentalism

Is climate change real? What are some of the specific threats posed by climate change? How exactly are we acting to prevent or reverse climate change? How much money is being spent on climate change research and response? Are there any entrepreneurs who are already capitalizing on the opportunities that you’re talking about? Are any big foundations or governments making investments with an eye towards the effects of climate change? What other environmental issues need to be reconsidered in light of the theory you're presenting here?


Why don’t you address the issue of externalities in your SDA on price theory? Isn’t the climate the ultimate public good? Isn’t the market incapable of providing public goods? How can the market work when environmental goods like the ocean and the air and forests don’t have prices? Are you saying that they’re not valuable if they don’t have a price? Why don’t they have a price? Should they have a price, since they’re so important? If the market is so powerful, why didn’t it prevent climate change in the first place? How would a socialist society handle these problems? 

Doesn’t responding to climate change require a concerted effort from everyone? Can’t only the government force everyone to act in the right way? Can’t the ideas you’re advocating be implemented by governments just as well, if not better, than they could by private individuals? If not, why not? Since you admitted that laws are needed to the market to function properly, aren’t you admitting that government is necessary for the market to function? Does it actually hurt to have the government fighting climate change, even if we should also prepare for its effects? 

Why haven’t I heard your definition of economics before? Are there other accepted definitions that you’ve recast? Why exactly were the accepted definitions unsatisfactory?  What other paradigms, besides the view of climate change, are you actually going to attack through your project? Why do you think people have this current view of climate change in their heads? What’s the best way of spreading your view?

What does it mean to say that the human mind is the source of meaning in the universe? Do things not exist without us (is this some philosophical point about trees falling in the forest)? How can we be opposed to nature if we are products of nature? Isn’t that a narcissistic view of humanity? What about animal rights? How can we objectively say that humans are worth more than the rest of nature? Are you saying that? What are other implications of the subjective theory of value? What does that mean for the practical aspect of your project? 

Does your project have a practical aspect? What’s one tangible opportunity presented by climate change? How do we take advantage of that opportunity? What will the world look like in twenty years? Fifty years? How will it look differently depending on whether we do what you recommend or not? Are we seeing changes already? What does seeing climate change as an economic opportunity actually mean/look like? How likely is this to happen? How will changes in technology affect the climate change debate and response?

How exactly are you going to sell this as a better view of climate change than the one we currently have? Is it a better view, or merely a different view? How important is this? How can you relate your project to other students’ projects? What will your end product look like?