I completely agree with him. I know people who are graduating with 2:1's in quantitative subjects in the UK (which is the grade threshold for getting a job) at russell group universities who still think that 1/(x^2+y^2)^0.5 = 1/x + 1/y or can't integrate log(x) or similar.
People are far too confident of their abilities these days. What we need is a healthy dose of modesty and recognition that even if you graduated top of your class, you don't know jack shit.
No shit? How about an employer that's willing to hire us in full acknowledgement of the fact that we "don't know jack shit"? Every single employer as far as I've seen expects entry-level candidates to have this, that, the other thing, the kitchen sink, and a bag of chips to top it off, so to speak, because within a week of posting a job app, they can get that.
And in the meantime, those of us who graduated 2009 and after are fucked for life.
Yike Lu, there are opportunities and plenty of them, but there not where people expect or want them to be. This notion of people making big bucks "quant trading" - it's a pipe dream. Most traders aren't quants and most traders don't make a killing.Now, those opportunities are far and few between, and not through any fault of our own.
I'm not even saying for myself or Ilya's sake really, but for the broader economy. I have no reason to complain myself, except what I see as a harmful attitude of the older generation towards the younger, given the current circumstances. In a good job market, I would completely back Stephens' point. Actually, I think the extent to which Ilya has taken his anger is too far.
The younger generation has to adapt and move away from the easy stuff (that Stephens talks about) that doesn't improve (or even hurts) their employability, be willing to take less glamorous jobs as you suggest. But, this takes time and in the meanwhile, unemployment is in fact high.
The older generation has to realize the old days are over and the balance is far in the employer's favor as BBW mentions and Ilya so keenly knows. And it has to realize how long it can take - an out of work lit major isn't going to turn into an elite programmer over night.
Again, I'm generalizing, not so much talking about the financial sector.
Again, I'm generalizing, not so much talking about the financial sector.
Quite right. High unemployment among the young is a global phenomenon -- which ignited both the "Arab Spring" and the Occupy movement (though the latter is more of a joke). It is also high in Europe, particularly among Club Med. The difference in the United States is high and non-dischargeable student debt and a country caught in political stasis as it hurtles downwards. There's a good book review by John Gray that's worth a glance. More on stasis can be found in the Archdruid's latest essay.
IMO student debt is a red herring. It doesn't matter what amount of debt we hold, so long as we can find the jobs to pay it off. The problem is when we can't find work because the entire employment market is a bad case of recursion with no base case scenario besides "work for us for free for 3-6 months and then *maybe* we'll give you a job."
No shit? How about an employer that's willing to hire us in full acknowledgement of the fact that we "don't know jack shit"? Every single employer as far as I've seen expects entry-level candidates to have this, that, the other thing, the kitchen sink, and a bag of chips to top it off, so to speak, because within a week of posting a job app, they can get that.
And in the meantime, those of us who graduated 2009 and after are fucked for life.
Umm. Your first point is patently incorrect.
... but are you really saying that about 50% of us should never have the opportunity to use what we've studied?
Higher education has been sold under false pretences all over the world but particularly in the US and UK (Blair's daft target was to get one of every two youngsters into higher education). It gets politicians off the hook with regard to pervasive unemployment, stagnant (if not falling) wages, and the endemic economic insecurity that now afflicts most wage-earners. The politician's response is, "Get yourself an education and the world will be your oyster." Every lying, thieving American demagogue talks about the importance of education -- Clinton, GWB, Obama. The time, the money, and the risk is yours -- all in return for a (generally meretricious) paper credential. You go into debt for that piece of paper, which essentially means indentured servitude if you manage to snag a job. The uncomfortable question of where exactly are the jobs for this credentialed population is never raised, or never spoken of as a collective problem: everyone is encouraged to see it as their own individual problem.
Speaking of student debt, http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/13/b...ighing-down-a-generation-with-heavy-debt.htmlPerhaps I should have restated it. Much better to be $100,000 in debt with a well-paying job than $30,000 in debt with no prospects.
Higher education has been sold under false pretences all over the world but particularly in the US and UK (Blair's daft target was to get one of every two youngsters into higher education). It gets politicians off the hook with regard to pervasive unemployment, stagnant (if not falling) wages, and the endemic economic insecurity that now afflicts most wage-earners. The politician's response is, "Get yourself an education and the world will be your oyster." Every lying, thieving American demagogue talks about the importance of education -- Clinton, GWB, Obama. The time, the money, and the risk is yours -- all in return for a (generally meretricious) paper credential. You go into debt for that piece of paper, which essentially means indentured servitude if you manage to snag a job. The uncomfortable question of where exactly are the jobs for this credentialed population is never raised, or never spoken of as a collective problem: everyone is encouraged to see it as their own individual problem.