A Bubble in PhDs?
July 2, 2011 in Daily Bulletin
Is it possible that too many people desire a PhD without properly understanding the underlying value of the degree? The Economist suggests that it might be. Their arguments include:
- The number of PhD positions seems to have little to do with the number of available job openings for that degree.
- On the flip side business executives are complaining that they don’t have enough skilled workers, suggesting that PhDs are teaching students the wrong types of skills.
- Even countries that have a declining population (such as Japan) have had a recent spurt in students with PhD degrees. This is a problem that will get worse as the Asian countries rise and expand their academic institutions.
- Universities have begun to treat PhD students as “cheap, highly motivated and disposable labour,” paying them as little as $20,000 a year.
- Postdocs in Canada have a lower average salary than construction workers.
There’s a lot more in the full report available here.
Source: The Economist
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