I think this is what you call an unsupported assertion. If you look at various world rankings of best universities, you tend to see a mix of UK and US universities. The UK doesn't have a particularly expensive university system (or at least didn't until very recently) - so how come many of our universities end up near the top? I think there are much more complicated factors at work than SOCIALISM MAGICALLY DESTROYS EVERYTHING
Ah Leafsnail, you never cease to oppose me (and occasionally even make a good point while doing it
).
Well, firstly, I am a socialist, compared to international and even national standards, so I doubt that is what I meant...
So, let's look at the University listings as you propose: This one here is pretty acclaimed internationally.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academic_Ranking_of_World_Universities,_2010Ah, USUSUSUSUKUSUSUSUSUK. I'm starting to see a pattern, there. Also, the UK universities
listed here don't accept all students. They get to pick the cream of the crop.
The application system to Cambridge and Oxford involves additional requirements, with candidates typically called to face-to-face interviews.
How applicants perform in the interview process is an important factor in determining which students are accepted.[56] Most applicants are expected to be predicted at least three A-grade A-level qualifications relevant to their chosen undergraduate course, or equivalent overseas qualifications.
So yeah, if you get hand-picked like that, you are much more likely to make the most out of it, instead of slacking off and trying to postpone the working life as long as possible. That, I admit, is based mostly on several anecdotal evidence of friends who studied abroad in the US. Especially people whose parents had to pay out of their asses to come up with the tuition, or students on scholarships worked really hard, whereas that would only net you a pat on the back over here. It's a common criticism on EU socialism, that it takes away the incentives. If I suddenly get a 50% raise, I would see only 15% more in my bank account (not just because of taxes, that is including all kinds of stuff that's income-dependent). So why work 50% harder if that means I'll just get 15% more money?
Well, we're lucky not everyone is as lazy as I or the average person is. On the other hand, there's also people who say that you can measure a country's civilisation by how it treats it's poor.
It's also why I wish that the parents "share" the cost of adding a child to the system... and why they are informed how much it costs. I don't find any issue with privatized colleges, but mainly because of the greater issues at hand (lower education.)
What do you mean by share?
Right now I have added a child to the system. It's an only child, raised with a lot of attention. It has two higher-educated parents and has some money in the family to get it kickstarted. It is already showing above average prowess in intellectual and social behaviour (as expected) and will all likelyhood net our society more than it will cost. This "raising" doesn't come free, and the time that I invest I don't get paid for.
YOU should be paying ME.