'One of the clearest and most important studies to be published on education, worldwide, in many decades' Danny Dorling
Does the education system make better people? Why are so many – teachers and students alike – stressed and dissatisfied? Do we need to revive real education?
Ideally, education is about the pursuit of truth, beauty and morality. But in the last few decades, a perilous fixation with human capital – skills, knowledge and aptitudes required for the labour market – has trampled over curricula, schools and universities. Rather than learning how to think critically about the world, from cradle to grave students are trained to be more effective workers, to make more money, and to serve an hegemonic ideology. Teachers and researchers are pressed to serve those goals.
In this concluding book in his series on the commons, Guy Standing shows us how education – intrinsically a common public good – has been enclosed, privatised, financialised and corrupted, turned into an instrument of societal control, not human emancipation, weakening democracy, not strengthening it. Human Capital charts how the education industry largely serves commercial interests, not its teachers and students, and considers how to revive its lost values, to save society for the common good.
Guy Standing is a British professor of Development Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, and co-founder of the Basic Income Earth Network (BIEN).
Standing has written widely in the areas of labour economics, labour market policy, unemployment, labour market flexibility, structural adjustment policies and social protection. His recent work has concerned the emerging precariat class and the need to move towards unconditional basic income and deliberative democracy.
As someone working in education, a lot of what Guy Standing outlines in Human Capital resonated deeply with what I witness and fear from reading the news and tracking education policy choices around the world. However, seeing it laid out so systematically was startling.
Standing masterfully connects the dots between the ‘money-makers’ (the rising plutocracy) and the widening chasm of modern inequality. He exposes an uncomfortable truth: so many elements of our education system are being systematically flushed for profit and corporate commodification, rather than doing what education should do—fostering open, enquiring minds and preparing young people for true citizenship.
This is manifesting in a number of catastrophic and dangerous ways, and Standing’s tome is deeply investigative in exposing instances where money-making has trumped (pun intended) the pursuit of a free and balanced education; for example, publishers self-censoring topics such as racial profiling in policing or removing ‘implications that the climate crisis is a proven fact’ so as to continue to make financial profits.
The closed networks of million and billionaires taking ownership of education and using it as a license to print money is, frankly, scandalous; and Standing exposes many examples of the rich and powerful taking on education opportunities that should be strictly non-profit and then milking them by awarding contracts to businesses that they also own – often financially mis-managing the entity into the ground before leaving with a hearty personal payout.
Human Capital is an apt title; as long as I can remember, success in education has been defined in terms of how much money you can make as a result of your education. University is deemed poor value-for-money if the degree doesn’t yield an increase in income. This is exemplified by the 2023 article by The Economist ‘Useless Studies’ – if the degree doesn’t make you rich, it’s useless. We are bound up chasing a capitalistic fantasy in which there should be no artists, poets, classicists or philosophers. Yet, people are not capital.
This was a tough holiday read. The points made in this book are incredibly sound, deeply urgent, and should serve as a massive wake-up call for any education policy maker.
The only reason this didn't get a full five stars comes down to its accessibility. The book assumes a robust grasp of economics from the outset. It is peppered with academic jargon that might feel a alienating to anyone who isn't already deeply engaged with the discipline. I was having to look up quite a few words as I went along. In part as a result of this, an also due to sentence and chapter length, some of the chapters dense and require real effort to pick through.
That nuance aside, the core message is vital. It’s an essential, eye-opening read for anyone who cares about the future of learning and the soul of our society. I am loudly recommending it to colleagues, and, if I knew any of them (!) I’d be leaving it on the desk of education policy makers and hoping that, against all odds, the messages get through.
This book explores the modern state of the education system from preschool to university (with a focus on England/USA). He paints a picture of an education system more and more focusing solely on the creation of ”human capital” (good workers) where quality is being corrupted by soulless investors out to make as much profit as possible.
This book is jam packed with interesting facts and ideas (and a lot of depressing facts…) Some things that stood out to me:
- What does it say about the education system when Boris Johnson went to some of the ”best” schools in England? - Should universities only teach skills/knowledge relevant for a career or should they also support the moral development of their students? - Special needs schools being described as a ”great investment opportunity!” - We should bring back workers guilds, as in it would be the people working in the education system who govern it, instead of profiteering investors or corrupt/inknowledgable politicians. - Universities selling research to companies to make money to survive (companies save money by not having to do their own research, instead can make a profit off of government funded research) - Universities in the USA self-censoring to please the rich investors that keep them afloat. - There will always be a demand for education (and governments will help fund it!) so it’s a great investment opportunity! Turn your millions into billions today :)
The author (one of the people who first proposed the concept of a universal income) proposes that education should be about the search for truth and developing people into moral citizens ready to participate in a democracy. A place where different view points can be openly discussed and is accessible to everyone. Where there is room for variety in how teachers teach and students learn instead of everything being standardized and the focus being on exams. Plus more time set aside for deep reading (oh yes I’m definitely in support of more deep reading )
So there’s both inspiring ideas about how education could be and many depressing facts about the state of it today. Honestly there’s so many interesting points its hard to choose just a few to bring up here.
Though depressing this book makes me at least happy to be studying to work as a teacher in Swedish preschools. I think the preschool system here is very close to what the author believes in. Where the focus is on developing the children as a whole human being both morally and intellectually.