barmar, on 2013-April-02, 10:14, said:
Something else I've heard about on this subject is much more difficult income mobility has become.
Many of us in the US are 2-4 generations removed from immigrants (I'm 3 removed on my father's side, 2 on my mother's). Most of them came over very poor, but they worked hard and were able to send their children to college, and they made it into the middle class.
These days, if you grow up in a lower-class environment, it's much harder to raise yourself and your family out of poverty. This obviously adds to the income inequality problem: the rich get richer, but the poor stagnate.
It's very similar in the UK, although college fees are lower than in the US and obtaining government backed loans to go to university is pretty much automatic if you want them (don't know how this compares to the US). You only repay these loans if you earn a decent salary, and they're written off at a certain age (40 ?)
My great grandparents were all born in Eastern Europe, my grandparents all born in London, my parents were the first generation of their families to go to university, basically all sides of my family originally were small businessmen of varying sorts.
The problems in the UK are multifaceted:
Jobs that have never required a degree before now do.
Because of this, too many people go to university.
They emerge with massive debts which the salaries from the jobs that were not graduate jobs before won't repay.
The university courses have seriously dumbed down to cope with the people who shouldn't really have gone to university in the first place.
The government have cranked up the course fees to pay for the excess of people, they could be a lot more generous if there were less people there.
There is a widespread fear of being saddled with a student loan for 20 years, without understanding that if you don't get a decent job, you don't pay it back. This is putting off the people that university would enable to make the biggest move up socially.
A friend of the family (no longer with us, but would be about 75 now) wanted to go to university, but was told by his family to go out to work as they needed the money. He got a job as the office junior at a firm of solicitors. After being there a few years, they got him qualified as a lawyer, and he became a well known London solicitor. That would not happen now.