Today 's US economy should understand the current economic crisis of the United States anyone who can obtain television, magazines, or newspaper, along with bad economic reviews. Not to mention the bad state of technology shares listed on Nasdaq, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Standard & Poor's 500 Index seem to be falling day by day. The Nasdaq index fell nearly two-thirds from the peak of last year, the Dow Jones index fell 8% after completing the biggest decline in a week. In the past 11 years, S & P 500 has decreased by 25
University degrees can be tickets for this cycle and middle class work. Today 's American economy gives unbalanced remuneration to those with university degrees. The data shows that the university is important. All new jobs born after the Great Depression were graduates 8. The adult's unemployment rate of at least an associate undergraduate degree is only 2.5%. 9 Graduates who received higher education are more likely to receive retirement savings or health insurance based on their employers and may also extend their lives 10.
The United States is shifting from national economy, analog economy, and industrial economy to the global digital information economy. All our social institutions, universities and universities are made for the former. Today they seem to be broken. Their job is not as effective as it used to be. By repairing or replacing - there could be more combinations - they need to be reinstalled to accommodate the new era. As the United States shifts from agricultural economy to industrial economy, higher education has experienced this evolution in the past. This classic agricultural academy has been imported from the UK in the 17th century and its curriculum is rooted in the Middle Ages to educate knowledgeable clergy to manage colonies. This model lasted until the early 19th century.
For those living in the agricultural economy of the 18th century, today's economic situation seems to be unfamiliar at all. Today agriculture (and related industries) accounts for only 7% of the US GDP. We experienced the Industrial Revolution followed by social and economic changes, which changed our way of life (and agriculture). Today our tractor is led by a satellite and our seed comes from the laboratory. We used the ones James Scott called "modern" agriculture to export models to other countries in the world of the Green Revolution.