Re: how much is enough?
They subsidize a lot more for citizens. But having been up there with local kids fleeing, it also occurs that even public universities in the US look considerably more like an investment fund running a minor league sports franchise with associated high-end retail and condos than Canadian universities do. Just walking around it sticks out. The book store's not brought to you by Barnes and Noble. The swag merch shop's not brought to you by Champion. There's no Starbucks franchise in the cafeteria. When the professors are making less than the grad students and the basketball coach makes more than anyone, even the med school dean and the university president, and they just scrapped history for a pharmaceutical sales program, you start to get the feeling like maybe education ain't what the game's all about any more....
They subsidize a lot more for citizens. But having been up there with local kids fleeing, it also occurs that even public universities in the US look considerably more like an investment fund running a minor league sports franchise with associated high-end retail and condos than Canadian universities do. Just walking around it sticks out. The book store's not brought to you by Barnes and Noble. The swag merch shop's not brought to you by Champion. There's no Starbucks franchise in the cafeteria. When the professors are making less than the grad students and the basketball coach makes more than anyone, even the med school dean and the university president, and they just scrapped history for a pharmaceutical sales program, you start to get the feeling like maybe education ain't what the game's all about any more....



There was a Bloomberg article a year or two ago about the empty houses in Japan or the towns with only old people in them. It remains to be seen how Japan addresses this problem. I'm not entirely sure Japan is a country that would be willing to accept a lot of non-ethnic Japanese people into the country. Also, there really isn't anything wrong with a drop in population so long as it doesn't become a spiral into extinction. The need for neverending growth is part of junk economics.
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