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Focus on economics, RBA tells schools (Read 458 times)
freediver
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Focus on economics, RBA tells schools
Feb 19th, 2019 at 12:36pm
 
This would help to avoid the situation where the public celebrates Nostrodamus-style popular economists for predicting the GFC, when the reserve bank was on the front page telling everyone the GFC was coming and that was why they were ramping up interest rates. It would also have meant that more people would have headed their warning and not gone into debt when the market was about to crash. The reserve bank is actually far more effective in it's role when people understand why it adjusts interest rates and act accordingly, rather than relying on high interest rates alone to discourage borrowing.

Focus on economics, RBA tells schools

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/education/focus-on-economics-rba-tells-schools/news-story/556d100126d3e226738e6cbdf2cda7b4

The Reserve Bank has called on education authorities to help ­arrest the sharp decline in the number of senior students in NSW studying economics, by ­elevating the status of the subject within the curriculum.

Once the third most popular subject choice for Year 12 students, economics enrolments have plummeted over the past two decades.

Just 7 per cent of Year 12 students took the subject last year — two-thirds of them boys — compared with 40 per cent in 1991.

The number of schools offering the subject has also fallen: just 30 per cent of government schools and 55 per cent of non-government schools teach economics.

In its submission to the NSW Curriculum Review, the Reserve Bank recommends that economics — a social science dealing with the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services — have “a more prominent place in a refreshed curriculum”.

It recommends that all students be exposed to “relevant and relatable” economic concepts and issues throughout their secondary school years and for more students to be equipped to study the subject in Year 12.

The RBA also calls on more teachers to be equipped with the training to deliver the subject and for the embedding of economics into other subject areas.

The decline, according to the bank, has been most evident among girls and at schools with low socio-economic status rankings. It has been more pronounced than that seen in Year 12 STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) subjects, which were on a similar trajectory until the mid-2000s but have since improved.

“The fall in STEM participation, particularly by female students, was considered to warrant a policy response,” the RBA says.

“There are currently numerous initiatives and a large commitment of resources from both public and private sectors to ­address this issue.”

According to the bank, there are public and private benefits to increasing enrolments among school students, including boosting “economic literacy” among the wider community and to “raise the collective ability of the economics profession”.

“The labour market values the skills learned in the study of economics,” the RBA says. Graduate earnings were higher than for most fields of study, surpassed only by IT and engineering.

“Importantly, the sorts of skills acquired in the study of economics — in particular analytical and problem-solving skills — are ­likely to be highly valued as the nature of work changes.”

Barker College, a co-educational school on Sydney’s upper north shore, has 140 senior students studying economics this year, including 60 in Year 12.

Teacher Len Nixon said the subject was popular among students at the independent school, largely the result of demographic factors, but also due to the way the school taught the subject: balancing theory with practical skills such as problem-solving.

Mr Nixon said the economics curriculum was ripe for a revamp and more work needed to be done to boost girls’ participation.

“Girls are being put off studying economics; it’s perceived as a ‘male’ subject and it just isn’t,” he said.
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Bias_2012
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Re: Focus on economics, RBA tells schools
Reply #1 - Feb 19th, 2019 at 1:31pm
 
Learning the economics of making hamburgers do they mean? 'bout the only job the students will get

Besides, who'd find the RBA creditable on the subject of economics when they print money out of thin air and then charge the government interest on it
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John Smith
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Re: Focus on economics, RBA tells schools
Reply #2 - Feb 19th, 2019 at 3:56pm
 
Didn't you do economics FD? Doesn't seem to have helped you any.
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Frank
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Re: Focus on economics, RBA tells schools
Reply #3 - Feb 19th, 2019 at 7:53pm
 
The proper, actual name for the subject is Political Economics.

That's what Adam Smith, Marx, Friedman, Keynes and the rest were talking about. Political Economics.

And of course you can't properly study Economics if the political is captured by either he progs or the dries. You musn't OVER-politicise it, yet you must be aware of its inevitable political (and psychological, geographical, imaginative) dimensions. Too much politics kills the imagination and creativity. Too much poetry, imagination and creativity can easily ignore the reality of politics.

It is the 'dismal science' because most often it crashes between the Scylla and Charybdis of fact and imagination  - the human predicament.





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Grappler Racist Filth
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Re: Focus on economics, RBA tells schools
Reply #4 - Feb 19th, 2019 at 9:59pm
 
Must be better then Weirdo Studies......... just saying...

Although if economists really ever got it right we'd all be in clover....
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“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
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Jasin
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Re: Focus on economics, RBA tells schools
Reply #5 - Feb 19th, 2019 at 11:43pm
 
Students are seeing what a pathetic state Australian Economics is in and realise that it is a 'sinking ship'.
So naturally, they stay clear of anything 'Economical'.
The fact that 'Politics' runs Australia's Economic sector - also shows, the flawed 'Captaincy' of the ship, in the first place.
If the Banks had run our Economy in the first place and not these Politicians, we might have some of the most powerful Banks in the world and a very wealthy country. We could easily afford a Canal Waterway System throughout the county and buy brand new Jet Fighters and not hand-me-down versions for $50 billion.

Art is the growing Industry, thanks especially to Computers more than Oil Paints.
Mining and Fishing are Resource dependent in regards to making money. Like Oil - they have a lifespan of demand.

But really. That which is 'Mental' based in the Northern Hemisphere (Like Politics) is 'Physical' based in the Southern Hemsphere. That which is 'Physical' based in the Northern Hemsiphere (Like Art) is 'Mental' based in the Southern Hemisphere.
Same with Economics  Wink
Australians are being 'Economical' - just not as much as the University version of 'Mental' achievement.
Instead, we are physically efficient, enterprising, clever and calculated.
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Grappler Racist Filth
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Re: Focus on economics, RBA tells schools
Reply #6 - Feb 20th, 2019 at 9:49am
 
The Four R's - Readin', Ritin', Rithmetic, and Reconomics.... (the art of wrecking a silly nation as opposed to Hawke's National Reconcilation)...

The Fifth R is ... RFUKIT ... I'll get a job as a tradie and do cash work.....
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“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
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