New at Cato Unbound: Charles Murray vs. the B.A.

by Will Wilkinson on October 7, 2008

Charles Murray argues that idea that everyone should get a four-year college degree is the bunk.

Here’s this month’s sales pitch:

Universal college education is often held up by politicians and pundits as a heady ideal of social progress. Economists insistently point out the “wage premium” for college graduates and infer that a main route to greater social and economic equality is an increase in college enrollment. Barack Obama, probably America’s next president, has put forth a plan for meaty tax credits  “for Americans who need a hand with tuition and fees,” because, as he says, “I do not accept an America where you can’t achieve your potential because you can’t afford it.” But does this really make sense? Do you really need a four-year college degree to “achieve your potential”? Is more college for more people really such a guaranteed ticket to greater opportunity and equality?

In this month’s Cato Unbound, the American Enterprise Institute’s Charles Murray, who knows something about ruffling feathers, argues that the BA degree isn’t all its cracked up to be, and urges us to adopt a system that stops pushing everyone to get a BA, whether they really need one or not, and starts offering a wide array of certification exams that signal competence without requiring years of college and thousands in debt. Lined up to reply are economist Pedro Carneiro of the University College, London, an expert in “human capital”; economist Bryan Caplan of George Mason University, who suspects that value of higher education is more about signaling than the cultivation of skill; and education policy expert Kevin Carey of Education Sector.

Carneiro is a frequent co-author of Nobelist James Heckman. His retort to Murray will be available in the morn. The idea that increasing rates of college enrollment is a key to reducing wage inequality is extremely widespread among labor and education economists. If Murray’s right, it would seem that lot of fancy economists aren’t.

  • Christopher M
    Those interested should also take a look at Jason Malloy's analysis here.

    Malloy's argument, from the data, is that "People with average and below average IQs are getting just as much of a financial return out of their 4-year degree as those above the 85th percentile." This leaves open, of course, the question whether there might be alternatives to college that could do equally well for people.
  • Cool Cal
    Here is an article on a phenomenon you may be interested in, Will. It talks about the UK's new policy of allowing McDonalds and other businesses to award diplomas replete with marketing and finance courses to their service employees as a sort of enhanced trainee program. Naturally, many liberal reformers are infuriated by this (It's a private business institution letting low-income workers make large hurdles in valuable real world education, instead of the state patronizing soul-enriching, but functionally useless liberal arts institutions for the poor - an outrage).

    Here be the link:

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/education/72...
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