George & Bill
semiotically superfluous
In my understanding, the former has always been a moral problem - it's not fair that rich kids get a better education than poor kids - and the latter, by which I mean the puzzlingly large rewards that that top executives get even during recessions, an economic mystery - we're told that you have to pay for talent, but it's unclear why the price is quite so high.
But it struck me that the two are closely connected. We know that going to one of the best schools makes you much more likely to go to one of the best unis, and that that in turn makes you much more likely to be in the field of talent from which top earners are chosen. We can gather from comparing the proportion of pupils at, say, Eton, who manage to eventually graduate with good degrees from Oxbridge, with the proportion from a typical school who do so, that the vast majority of people who have the potential to be schooled to the level that is required to eventually enter the top tier of the economy never are.
What would happen to top pay if they were?
If every school sent the same proportion of its pupils on to an elite university education as Eton does*, what would be the effect on top levels of pay?
Sorry if I'm going down a well-trodden train of thought.
*Assuming for a moment that the places existed.
But it struck me that the two are closely connected. We know that going to one of the best schools makes you much more likely to go to one of the best unis, and that that in turn makes you much more likely to be in the field of talent from which top earners are chosen. We can gather from comparing the proportion of pupils at, say, Eton, who manage to eventually graduate with good degrees from Oxbridge, with the proportion from a typical school who do so, that the vast majority of people who have the potential to be schooled to the level that is required to eventually enter the top tier of the economy never are.
What would happen to top pay if they were?
If every school sent the same proportion of its pupils on to an elite university education as Eton does*, what would be the effect on top levels of pay?
Sorry if I'm going down a well-trodden train of thought.
*Assuming for a moment that the places existed.