there is a reason why social science graduates are desired in a lot of roles, when I was working at Bloomberg some of the most desired graduates were English / politics / language grads. As long as you went to a good school in the majority of cases the subject matter is secondary it is used as a flag to employers regarding your potential. I studied Economics, I work in finance and I have used (at the most) the content I learned in University for 1% of my role. However the skills I picked up at University - critical thinking etc have been vital. Without a University degree you do not pick up these skills and you can not flag them to employers.
On a social side of things there is a direct link to higher education and crime/anitsocial ills (causation and correlation I know) - having a more educated population is a benefit in itself.
http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/usappblog/20...ely-that-you-will-commit-a-crime-as-an-adult/
Our University system is lacking and there is a need for a greater emphasis on vocational training, other countries do this better. As normal my argument begins and ends with look at a country that does what we want and copy it, and typically its the Nordics or Germany we should be taking our lead from.
On a social side of things there is a direct link to higher education and crime/anitsocial ills (causation and correlation I know) - having a more educated population is a benefit in itself.
http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/usappblog/20...ely-that-you-will-commit-a-crime-as-an-adult/
Our University system is lacking and there is a need for a greater emphasis on vocational training, other countries do this better. As normal my argument begins and ends with look at a country that does what we want and copy it, and typically its the Nordics or Germany we should be taking our lead from.