For decades, the idea that more education will lead to greater individual and national prosperity has been a cornerstone of developed economies. Indeed, it is almost universally believed that college diplomas give Americans and Europeans a competitive advantage in the global knowledge wars.Challenging this conventional wisdom, The Global Auction forces us to reconsider our deeply held and mistaken views about how the global economy really works and how to thrive in it. Drawing on cutting-edge research based on a major international study, the authors show that the competition for good, middle-class jobs is now a worldwide competition--an auction for cut-priced brainpower--fueled by an explosion of higher education across the world. They highlight a fundamental power shift in favor of corporate bosses and emerging economies such as China and India, a change that is driving the new global high-skill, low-wage workforce. Fighting for a dwindling supply of good jobs will compel the middle classes to devote more time, money, and effort to set themselves apart in a bare-knuckle competition that will leave many disappointed. The authors urge a new conversation about the kind of society we want to live in and about the kind of global economy that can benefit workers, but without condemning millions in emerging economies to a life of poverty. The Global Auction is a radical rethinking of the ideas that stand at the heart of the American Dream. It offers a timely expos? of the realities of the global struggle for middle class jobs, a competition that threatens the livelihoods of millions of American and European workers and their families.
Author(s): Phillip Brown, Hugh Lauder, David Ashton
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Year: 2010
Language: English
Pages: 209
Contents......Page 10
ONE: Introduction......Page 12
TWO: The False Promise......Page 26
THREE: Knowledge Wars......Page 40
FOUR: The Quality-Cost Revolution......Page 60
FIVE: Digital Taylorism......Page 76
SIX: The War for Talent......Page 94
SEVEN: Managing in the Global Auction......Page 109
EIGHT: High Skills, Low Wages......Page 124
NINE: The Trap......Page 143
TEN: A New Opportunity......Page 158
Notes......Page 176
B......Page 200
C......Page 201
E......Page 202
G......Page 203
I......Page 204
M......Page 205
O......Page 206
S......Page 207
U......Page 208
Z......Page 209