Ted, Margaret and others, 

While education should be free, it's important to remember why education costs, 
like health care costs, are so high. To be sure, the full reasons are many, but 
two stand out. First, eduction that is worth anything, like good medical care, 
is hands on and requires personal attention. Much of it simply cannot be 
automated, while productivity for many kinds of goods and services keeps 
increasing. Thus, per unit, education and health care costs go up relative to 
most things. Even low-cost, un-tenured lecturers, paid working-class salaries 
at best, still have high piece work rates.

Incidentally, among the recent causes of lowered employment,  suspect the 
Internet plays an increasing role. Not only book, record and video stores are 
disappearing, but all kinds of stores that sell things more easily accessed by 
net. And of course printers, book binders, and other related workers in many 
fields are beginning to disappear as well. That's when the net doesn't simply 
aid the off-shroign of jobs. All that adds to the relative up-pricing of 
education.

Second, and relatedly, while it's not quite Hollywood, or even Maj0r League 
Baseball, education does depend on a star system. In a true attention economy 
Henry Louis Gates, Gayatri Spivack or Steven Hawking and thousands of others 
can command very high prices. True, they're not obliged to, but then why hang 
out at elite institutions? Why accept much lower salaries than say the 
administrators at such places? 

Given the fact that routine work of most kinds is disappearing, in favor of 
attention -getting work, the only full answer would require a new kind of 
re-oredering of priorities, putting equality of results much higher among 
priorities. We need a national or international movement that does that.

Best,
Michael

On Feb 25, 2011, at 10:30 AM, t byfield wrote:

> [email protected] (Thu 02/24/11 at 04:02 PM +0100):

>> Now, to repeat your question, what is being or can be done in regard 
>> to an unsustainable system of student loans?
>
> I'd be very curious to hear what faculty have to say about this, but
> they seem to be awfully silent on the subject, don't they?
 <...>


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