{"id":1343,"date":"2014-04-11T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2014-04-11T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/staging.jbh.is\/?p=1343"},"modified":"2020-09-22T11:18:31","modified_gmt":"2020-09-22T11:18:31","slug":"bossy-besserwissers-vs-modest-sceptics-how-should-small-nations-design-their-educational-policies-for-an-uncertain-future","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jbh.is\/?p=1343","title":{"rendered":"BOSSY BESSERWISSERS VS. MODEST SCEPTICS: HOW SHOULD SMALL NATIONS DESIGN THEIR EDUCATIONAL POLICIES FOR AN UNCERTAIN FUTURE?"},"content":{"rendered":"<h3>1.<\/h3>\n<p>Foreign ministers are sometimes duty-bound to follow heads of state on official visits abroad. One such visit to the <i>Grand Duchy of Luxembourg<\/i> in the early 90s of the last century, turned out  to be memorable. As a matter of fact I find it quite relevant for the  topic of discussion alotted to me here today: <i>How should small nations design their educational policies for an uncertain future?<\/i><\/p>\n\n\n<!--more Continue reading-->\n\n\n<p><b>Gaston Thorn<\/b> was the grand old man of Luxembourg politics in the post-war era; several times PM and later on  EU-commission president.  He happened to be sitting next to me at a dinner table, during some rather long drawn-out and solemn ceremony.  I was curious to get to know, first hand, how Luxembourg had risen from  <i>rags to riches<\/i> in a short space of time. By this time, Luxembourg had already become the richest member of the EU-club.<\/p>\n<p>In essence, this is the <i>recipe for success<\/i>, which Mr. Thorn shared with me over steak and <i>vin rouge<\/i>  that memorable evening.<\/p>\n<p>FIRST: We managed to prevent introverted nationalists from declaring our \u201elocal dialect\u201c (as he called it) as our national language \u2013 to the exclusion of other tongues.<\/p>\n<p>SECOND \u2013 and here Mr. Thorn converted to the singular: I succeeded in preventing the same political forces from establishing a <i>national <\/i>university, obliged by law to teach in the legally protected language. Instead I proposed founding a \u201eStudents\u00b4 loan-and &#8211;  grants fund\u201c, enabling our students to pursue higher education abroad  (in Germany, France, Switzerland, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands and  later on \u2013  in the USA). Of course it  didn\u00b4t pass Mr. Thorn\u00b4s notice that in most cases foreigners were giving substantial  subsidies for educating  young people from Luxembourg, in so far as they didn\u00b4t collect tuition fees.<\/p>\n<p>And THIRD \u2013 he added for emphasis  : Having built this splendid structure (in which the state dinner took place) for our <i>National Theater<\/i>, I even managed to prevent \u201ethem\u201c from recruiting tenured local staff. Instead we kept  the premises open for theatrical and opera <i>troupes<\/i> from all over the world, performing to the highest international standards.<\/p>\n<p>To put it briefly,  Mr. Thorn\u00b4s message was the following: His small nation faced a choice: Either to build their institutions on their national heritage (language, culture and traditions);  or  to adopt an internationalist outlook, operating within the framework of <i>European integration<\/i>. After some soul-searching,  we opted for the second option,  said Mr. Thorn. In doing so we could speedily diversify our underdeveloped and outmoded economy.  We built up ultra-modern service industry (banking and finance) where our competitive edge was anchored in our international outlook.  Our young generation, educated and trained abroad, attending the best universities, knew the languages, laws, customs and  &#8211; last but not least \u2013 the <i>mentality<\/i> of our neighbours, at least as well as they themselves \u2013 if not better.<\/p>\n<p>This has been a higly successfull strategy. In fact Luxembourg is saying to her neighbours: Anything you can do, we can to better (i.e. in our chosen fields of expertise). Although criticised for sheltering sometimes ill begotten wealth under the veil of bank secrecy, they have been able to get away with it, at least so far. Perhaps that is a privilege given to the small?<\/p>\n<p>But at what price?  Have they had to sacrifice their distinct <i>national identity<\/i> for this material success? This is debateable. But we should take note, that with increasing prosperity, the status of their local dialect has gradually been enhanced;  and by now they even have their own permanent staff and domestic repertoire at their National Theater. Perhaps their choice was more a question of tactics rather than strategy?<\/p>\n<p>The question remains: <b>Is the Luxembourg example \u2013 successful as it is \u2013 something for small nations to emulate? I leave you with the question for our discussion afterwards.<\/b><\/p>\n<h3>2.<\/h3>\n<p>When Iceland gained home-rule from  faraway Copenhagen,  in 1904, one of the first things on the agenda was to establish a <i>national<\/i> university. \u201e<i>Land, language and culture<\/i>\u201c was the holy trinity, inscribed into its charter. In the beginning there were only three faculties.  The first one was for our linguistic and cultural heritage;  the second one was theology \u2013 for the indoctrination of priests for the church; and the third one was for the law of the land.  In other words: The national university was to be the guardian of the <i>raison d\u00b4\u00e9tre<\/i> of the embryonic state. It was meant to produce prosecutors, priests and pontificates of the past.<\/p>\n<p>By the time Iceland gained sovereignty in 1918 (albeit in royal union with Denmark until 1944), it is interesting to note, that the leaders of the independence movement made it their top priority,  in their negotiations with our former colonial masters, to secure a generous quota and free access for Icelandic students to the University of Copenhagen. Those were privileges that went way beyond anything offered to Danish citizens.<\/p>\n<p>Why?  Well, where was the new state going to recruit all the engineers, architects, technicians, managers, economists etc., etc., needed to steer the transformation from a stagnant, agrarian subsistence economy to a modern industrial society? Of course they had to come from abroad. From foreign universities, technological institutions and from work experience abroad \u2013 just as in the case of Luxembourg.<\/p>\n<p>In the case of Iceland, the recipe for our belated economic transformation in the 20ieth C. can be summed up something like this:<\/p>\n<ol>\n<li>A relatively high level of general education enabled us to adopt foreign technology speedily. Icelanders were never so poor, that they were illiterate.<\/li>\n<li>Access to foreign capital was opened up by foreign (Danish ) banks.<\/li>\n<li>Free access to European markets for our exports (primarily seafood) was secure in the era up to  the First World War.<\/li>\n<li>The <i>political impetus<\/i> for change came through the transfer of political power from the absent-minded colonial masters in Copenhagen to domestic politicians, dependent on their voters for reelection. <i>Democracy worked<\/i>.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>Despite our solemn emphasis on preservation of our national language and cultural heritage, Iceland in fact adopted a policy similar to Luxembourg\u00b4s in sending \u201eour best and the brightest\u201c abroad to study. There even emerged a geographical pattern to it:  The physical scientists (physics, chemistry, engineering, etc.) went to Germany; medical doctors went for their specialization, either to Scandinavia or the USA; the social scientists (including us economists) went at first to the UK or Scandinavia, but after the Second World War increasingly to  the USA. The literary or artistic crowd  went predominantly to France or Scandinavia.<\/p>\n<p><b>There is no doubt at all that those educational experiences of our educational elite  have had profound effect for the better on the formation of  Icelandic society and culture; making it more open,  dynamic  and adaptable to change than otherwise would have been thinkable.<\/b><\/p>\n<p>In the sixties we established a \u201e<i>Students\u00b4 loan-  and \u2013 grants fund<\/i>\u201c , almost at the same time as Gaston Thorn did it  in Luxembourg, to gain support for his internationalist outlook against the more inward-looking approach in his country. Since then the SLF has enabled those students who fulfill  minimum standards to study abroad at esteemed universities, all over the world.<\/p>\n<p><b>There is no way  that Iceland, due to our limited resources, could offer the level of expertise, in a variety of disciplines, that those students gain abroad. The cost- benefit analysis has so far, no doubt, been beneficial to us. But, of course,  there is a downside:  The risk of \u201ebrain-drain\u201c, instead of our \u201ebrain-gain\u201c.<\/b><\/p>\n<p>During the first decade of the 21st C. my country \u2013 which until then had at least aspired to  being a member of the exclusive club of <i>Nordic welfare states<\/i> \u2013  was turned into an experimental laboratory for  ill-founded, neo-conservative policies of the market-fundamentalist variety. This unfortunate experiment ended, in less than a decade, in  total, systemic collapse of both our financial institutions and national currency. Even the Central Bank became bankrupt. For years to come we shall have to carry the heavy burden of indebtedness, left behind by our incompetent and greedy banksters. Apart from a tiny financial elite, with its hidden funds in taxhavens all over the world, the nation has suffered an almost unique fall in living standards, higher taxes and savage cuts in public expenditures, not the least in the fields of healthcare and education.<\/p>\n<p>During the boom years we boasted of  almost a dozen universities . And the Rector of the University of Iceland announced plans for her institution to become one among the 100 best universities in the world. After the Crash, this is considered to be one of the least palatable jokes from this period of \u201e<i>collective madness<\/i>\u201c, as a world authority on financial folly described the Icelandic experiment.<\/p>\n<p>It will take us, Icelanders, a long time to recover from this catastrophy and return back to normal. Among other things, for the first time we now face the prospect of long-term <i>brain-drain<\/i>.  The danger is that the \u201ebest and the brightest\u201c, with  their advanced specialist training abroad will no longer find job opportunities in Iceland; or that salaries offered will have become distinctively non-competitive. Apart from a bonanza for mass-produced lawyers, profiting from endless litigation over debt issues in the years to come, the most advanced sectors of Icelandic society (IT, pharmaceuticals, energy technology, etc.) have been hardest hit.<\/p>\n<p>You don\u00b4t attract a lot of FDI, nor can you easily operate in international markets, behind the walls of <i>capital controls<\/i>.  But without capital controls , everyone agrees, the Icelandic currency would suffer another collapse, yet again doubling the debt-burden in the local currency. This is the price Icelanders seem to be willing to pay for not joining the EU.<\/p>\n<p><b>For how long shall we be able to sustain a generous support system for our students,  studying abroad, if the prospects of  return on the investment are fading away?<br>\n<\/b><\/p>\n<h3>3.<\/h3>\n<p><b>UNESCO<\/b> has reported that during the next 30 years, more people will be attending institutions of higher education than in the whole of history.  That\u00b4s a lot of people in a short space of time. And one more fact to help us concentrate our minds:  A six year old \u2013 starting school this fall \u2013 will presumably be seeking  retirement around 2075.  How are we going to prepare him or her \u2013 educating them, if you will \u2013 for this long working career?<\/p>\n<p>We may think we know the right questions \u2013 based on our experience and best practices internationally so far. But in a period of rapid technological change \u2013 of \u201e<i>creative destruction<\/i>\u201c, in the language of <b>Joseph Schumpeter<\/b> \u2013 our scientists and entrepreneurs may well have changed the answers, to paraphrase<b> Einstein<\/b>.<\/p>\n<p>Our scientists are regularily sending us signals \u2013 more and more frequently \u2013 that our single-minded pursuit of economic growth and frantic search for natural resources to exploit, all over the globe, is increasingly endangering our finite natural environment.  In our  geographical vicinity \u2013  in the Arctic High North \u2013  there is opening up a new continent, rich in natural resources,  but in a precarious and vulnerable  environment.<\/p>\n<p>Will we manage to utilize those riches for the benefit of mankind, under a regime of \u201e<i>sustainable developement<\/i>\u201c?  Or will we become the victims of \u201eAfrica-like\u201c grab for resources, leaving physical destruction and political mayhem in its wake? The simple answer is \u2013 we don\u00b4t know.<\/p>\n<p>It is gradually dawning upon our best social scientists, that the global financial system  is utterly out of control. The vast bulk of wealth creation in the neo-liberal era \u2013 has accrued to a tiny <i>plutocratic elite<\/i>, both in the advanced and emerging economies. The basic duty of democratic governance is to uphold the <i>rule  of law<\/i>. Nonetheless, this plutocratic elite has, with impunity,  stored away an estimated sum of 35 trillions of dollars in 60 tax-havens around the world (an amount equivalent to the GDPs of the USA and Japan \u2013 the biggest and the third biggest economies of the world \u2013  put together).  Although in clear breach of the rule of law, those taxhavens have hitherto enjoyed the protection of the most powerful states on earth. At the same time real wages are stagnating (or even declining) and youth unemployment has reached obscene proportions.  Those are clear symptoms of a sick <i>body politic<\/i> \u2013 and <i>a  mal-functioning democracy<\/i>.<\/p>\n<p>Political leaders, parliaments, governments  and the media are all increasingly under the thumb of this all powerful plutocratic elite, preventing effective action for reform in the common interest of humanity. Against the background of this analysis,  it is hardly surprising that  symptoms of the rise of authoritarian and even fascist political forces, are ominously emerging in many societies, in Europe and elsewhere.<\/p>\n<p><b>What about the liberating power of education?<\/b> Academia is supposed to be free from the shackles of special interest and entrenched prejudice. Have our learned professors fulfilled their civic duty to share their accumulated knowledge and benign wisdom with the rest of us? What about the state of mainstream economics, as taught at elite US universities and spread around the world as the universally acclaimed \u201c<i>conventional wisdom<\/i>\u201d?  How  many  Nobel-prize winners foresaw \u2013 let alone warned us of \u2013 the financial <i>tsunami<\/i>, which has engulfed America and Europe with devastating consequences for millions of people?<\/p>\n<p>Has the academic elite failed in translating their research into practical benefits for ordinary people? It didn\u00b4t escape our notice in Iceland, that the self-declared paragons of virtue of the financial system \u2013 the rating agencies \u2013 gave all the Icelandic banks triple  A-ratings, until the day before they collapsed. Only the day after were they rated as junk.  And our PM, who presided over my country\u00b4s economic ruin, could boast of at least three degrees from esteemed American universities  in his field of expertise \u2013 namely neo-liberal economics.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cSome of the smartest thinkers on problems at home and around the world are university professors, but most of them just don\u00b4t matter in today\u00b4s great debates. The most stinging dismissal of a point is to say: \u201c<i>That\u00b4s academic<\/i>\u201d. In other words, to be a scholar is, often, to be irrelevant\u201d. \u2013 This is a quotation from a brilliant op-ed piece in the N.Y. T., Feb. 16  by  the  regular columnist (and political scientist) <b>Nicholas Kristof<\/b>. A copy should be pasted on the notice-boards in the common rooms at all university campuses. The article ends with an eloquent appeal to the inhabitants of the ivory towers to step down and embroil themselves in our policy debates. It ends with those words: \u201c<i>Professors, don\u00b4t cluster yourselves like medieval monks \u2013 we need you!<\/i>\u201d<\/p>\n<p><b>I leave you with those questions and appeals for our later discussion.<\/b><\/p>\n<p><b>We have to make up our minds:<\/b>  Are we going to educate our descendants <i>for democracy \u2013 giving everyone an equal opportunity<\/i>?  Or are we to put the emphasis on <i>elite education<\/i>, exclusively for those with the means to pay for it?  Are we going the <i>Nordic<\/i> way \u2013   with its emphasis on  community  and the public duty to provide education for all? Or do we prefer the <i>American<\/i> way, where money can buy you everything  that is best in life \u2013 but at the cost of  segregated education \u2013 turning what was once the \u201c<i>land of opportunity<\/i>\u201c into a bastion of pecuniary privilege.  <b>Once again I leave you with those questions for our discussion.<\/b><\/p>\n<p>As for us, the small nations of this world, we should appreciate that ours is both the privilege of being able to practice democracy and the existential need to banish class divisions in order to maintain social cohesion. So I suggest that we should concentrate our minds on the following:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Give all our young the equal opportunity to be educated for democracy.<\/li>\n<li>Know our limits \u2013 concentrate our intellectual and material resources on what we are best at \u2013 and leave the rest to others.<\/li>\n<li>Our universities should aim at providing sound basic education, but when it comes to research and  development,   concentrate our efforts within our chosen fields of specialization.<\/li>\n<li>As for the \u201cbest and the brightest\u201d,   organize \u201cstudents\u00b4 loan- and -grants funds\u201d to give them the chance to reach the highest level of excellence within their fields of expertise.<\/li>\n<li>As for the risk of \u201c<i>brain-drain<\/i>\u201d \u2013 we simply have to live with it. Why not appreciate the thought that by offering some of our best brains to the world at large, we don\u00b4t aim to be free-riders,   but stand ready to do our bit to help create a better world.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>If you have a look at the UN index on the overall quality of life, you will notice, that small nations are coming out on top or doing very well. That is leading by example. Perhaps the attraction of our quality of life \u2013 compared to the  overcrowding  of the megacities of the future \u2013 will suffice to attract our best brains back home again.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Tartu University:  Vision 2032<\/p>\n<p>Introduction:<br \/>\nApril 11th Tartu University convened a seminar on the future of university education during the next two decades, under the above heading: Vision 2032.<\/p>\n<p>This seminar was a culmination of a research project which has lasted about a year, involving all faculties and departments of the university. Under the leadership of a co-ordinating committee, a number of inter-disciplinarian workshops have contributed their inputs. The purpose of all this is to revise the strategic concept of the University of Tartu, as well as its workplan for this period. This seminar brought in politicians, academicians, scientists and philosophers to review this work.<\/p>\n<p>Originally, Siim Kallas, former PM of Estonia and currently vice-president of EU-commission, was to be among the three key-note speakers. When Mr. Kallas dropped out at short notice, Rector Volli Kalm asked me to replace him. I have been for the past weeks a research fellow at the university\u00b4s Institute of Government and Politics and a guest-lecturer.<\/p>\n<p>What follows is the text of my speech at this seminar. JBH<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1,7],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1343","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-allar_greinar","category-articles-in-english"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/jbh.is\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1343","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/jbh.is\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/jbh.is\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jbh.is\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jbh.is\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1343"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/jbh.is\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1343\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2679,"href":"https:\/\/jbh.is\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1343\/revisions\/2679"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/jbh.is\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1343"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jbh.is\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1343"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jbh.is\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1343"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}