The head of the second-largest bank in the US has questioned the value of going to university, arguing that it does not provide the bulk of the skills needed in most workplaces.
Brian Moynihan, chief executive of the Bank of America, told a Brown University conference that college does provide workers in many fields with an important intellectual grounding.
But that contribution was often not worth the time and the financial cost, typically $200,000 (Ā£153,000) or more in the US, given the relatively greater value gained from work experience, Mr Moynihan said. Even with a $22Ā million salary, he said, he gave that same advice to his son.
āYou have to teach the basics,ā he told the conference, jointly hosted by Brown and Spainās IE University. āAnd for business, just like anything else, thereās a language and a skill set that you have to teach ā those basics are all IĀ need.ā
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āIf youāre a business school president, IĀ apologise, but the value of business schools is actually completely on the table right now,ā said Mr Moynihan, whose bank has 200,000 employees and $2.3Ā trillion in assets, second in the US only to JPMorgan Chase. Mr Moynihan is a Brown alumnus and also has a degree from the University of Notre Dameās law school.
He was not alone in delivering that basic point to the conference. From the worldās poorest continent, Fred Swaniker described creating the African Leadership University in 2015 with the goal of getting ready for 2035, when Africa will have the worldās largest working-age population.
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āBut we quickly realised, actually, that universities were the wrong vehicle,ā Mr Swaniker said.
Mr Swaniker estimated that about 10Ā per cent of necessary workplace skills were acquired in the classroom. Another 20Ā per cent came from peers, mentors and projects, while 70Ā per cent came from on-the-job experience, he said.
āIf we are talking about employment, or preparing people for future work or so forth,ā Mr Swaniker said, āitās important to recognise that universities were never designed to solve that problem, because fundamentally universities are knowledge enterprises, not skills enterprises.ā
As a result, Mr Swaniker has adjusted his plans for building universities across Africa and has instead begun creating ālifelong learning centresā that offer six-month courses aimed at providing leadership and technical skills for university graduates and other experienced workers.
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āUniversities must be seen as part of a new system for work-related skills,ā he said. āNot the system.ā
The Brown conference reflected broad concern about matching social expectations with workplace needs, and illuminated some wide country-by-country variations in how that is handled.
South Korea, with about 80Ā per cent of its high school leavers now going on to university, is finding that it has an oversupply of university graduates, said Jim Yong Kim, a Korean American and former Dartmouth College president, who led the World Bank for the past six years.
Yet South Korea ā like many places ā has established a public expectation about the value of a degree that is proving hard to reverse, even as many graduates end up āstarting coffee shopsā or otherwise finding themselves underemployed, Professor Kim said.
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Germany ā now a leader in vocational training, with about 40Ā per cent of its high school graduates going to university and 40Ā per cent receiving training in a trade ā fought a similar battle, Professor Kim said.
āIf you ask the Germans,ā he said, āthey will say that was difficult ā it took focused effort, it took a long time, but now weāre there.ā
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