Education Failure: We're no worse than...
Latvia!
In a Program for International Student Assessment survey comparing math skills, the U.S. proudly outshone such stellar educational competition as Uruguay, Thailand, Mexico, Indonesia, and Tunisia! That's the good news.
The bad news is that the richest country in the world was no better than mediocre, being outclassed by Hong Kong, Finland, South Korea, Netherlands, and Liechtenstein... big time!
Remember all of those high-paying, outsourced manufacturing jobs that are going to be replaced by intellectual-capital jobs? Well, apparently, that is not going to happen in the U.S. At least, not significantly more than it will happen in Uruguay or Latvia.
The problem with big-picture economics is that ideas are not always related to reality. There is a sequence that must be followed in order to go from A to C after B... A being manufacturing jobs, B being jobs outsourced, and C being new intellectual-capital jobs. I ask this (rhetorical) question: with the intellectual skills being displayed by today's U.S. students, what is the likelihood that they will take us from B to C?
Oh, there will always be the top-performers who will do well... even better relative to the general population. But what happens to the millions of Uruguay-level workers when the manufacturing sector has been shipped off to China or India or Vietnam because intellectual capital is not a factor for those jobs?
If you haven't read it, go back and read this.