E147: Let Colleges Fail! 84-Year-Old Professor Exposes the Truth
El Podcast6 Aug 2025

E147: Let Colleges Fail! 84-Year-Old Professor Exposes the Truth

Economist Richard Vedder argues that U.S. colleges are bloated, inefficient, and increasingly out of touch with students and the job market. He explains why creative destruction is necessary—and inevitable—in higher education.

👤 Guest Bio

Richard Vedder is Professor of Economics Emeritus at Ohio University, Director of the Center for College Affordability and Productivity, Senior Fellow at the Independent Institute, and author of Let Colleges Fail: The Power of Creative Destruction in Higher Education. He has taught since 1963 and is one of the most prominent critics of administrative bloat and inefficiency in academia.

🎙️ Topics Discussed
  • Declining college enrollment and public trust
  • Administrative bloat and faculty workload
  • The rise of useless degrees and “make-work” programs
  • Adjunctification and the academic underclass
  • The sorting function of college (and its failure)
  • Alternatives to traditional degrees
  • Creative destruction in higher ed
  • AI’s impact on the knowledge economy and higher education
  • How higher ed became disconnected from market forces and students
  • Ideas for reform: 3-year degrees, college equivalency exams, credit portability
📌 Main Points
  • Enrollment is dropping for the first time in modern U.S. history, even as the population grows—reflecting broad disenchantment with higher education.
  • Administrative bloat is one of the most destructive trends: some universities now employ more administrators than faculty.
  • Adjunctification has created an academic underclass: a two-tier system where elite tenured professors publish unread papers while low-paid adjuncts teach most students.
  • College no longer sorts talent effectively—grade inflation and credential inflation make it harder for employers to assess student value.
  • AI is disrupting white-collar work, challenging the basic rationale for many college degrees.
  • Solutions include shorter degree programs, reduction of admin staff, greater use of technology, modular degrees, and creative destruction through institutional failure.
💬 Top 3 Quotes
  • “Universities are in the knowledge business—but the one thing they don’t want you to know is what they’re actually doing.”
  • “There are more administrators in diversity, equity, and inclusion today at some universities than there are history professors.”
  • “We used to replace muscle with machines. Now we’re replacing brains—and that should terrify the higher ed establishment.”

🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright
💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/
📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.
⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.

Thanks for listening!

Avsnitt(188)

E76: A Son's Journey to Understanding Motherhood w/ Stuart Connelly

E76: A Son's Journey to Understanding Motherhood w/ Stuart Connelly

Filmmaker and author Stuart Connelly joins for a moving Mother’s Day conversation about his memoir Offered in Secret, chronicling his 1,800-mile journey to understand and honor his late mother.Guest B...

12 Maj 202453min

E75: From Draft Day to Retirement: Life of an NFL Player

E75: From Draft Day to Retirement: Life of an NFL Player

Former NFL lineman Mike Wahle joins the podcast to break down the realities of life in the league—from contracts and coaching to culture, taxes, and life after football.Guest Bio:Mike Wahle is a forme...

9 Maj 202454min

E74: Costa Rica vs. Nicaragua in Retirement

E74: Costa Rica vs. Nicaragua in Retirement

A 67-year-old American expat shares thier journey from retiring in Nicaragua to settling in Costa Rica, revealing the realities of expat life, cost of living, and the importance of flexibility abroad....

3 Maj 202459min

E73: Reshaping Real Estate: The Impact of the Commission Settlement

E73: Reshaping Real Estate: The Impact of the Commission Settlement

Bankrate journalist Jeff Ostrowski breaks down the real estate commission lawsuit, what changes starting July 2025, and what it all means for homebuyers, agents, and the future of U.S. housing.👤 Gues...

20 Apr 202440min

E72: Retire in Portugal & See the World for Free by Pet Sitting

E72: Retire in Portugal & See the World for Free by Pet Sitting

Terry and Clyde share how they reinvented their lives—losing half their body weight, retiring early to Panama, house-sitting across the globe, and ultimately settling in Portugal—on a modest budget an...

13 Apr 20241h 21min

E71: Securing Our Genetic Future - Explained by a Doctor

E71: Securing Our Genetic Future - Explained by a Doctor

Dr. William Blau, emeritus professor and author of Our Genetic Future, explores how modern medicine and environmental changes may be weakening natural selection, with profound consequences for human g...

4 Apr 20241h 3min

E70: Population Collapse: The Looming Crisis

E70: Population Collapse: The Looming Crisis

Darrell Bricker, co-author of Empty Planet, explains why global population decline—not overpopulation—is the defining issue of the 21st century and what it means for cities, economies, and politics.Gu...

27 Mars 202450min

E69: How to make money in Real Estate (In 2024)

E69: How to make money in Real Estate (In 2024)

Real estate investor Scott Shindelar explains how Millennials can achieve financial freedom through leveraged rental property investing, tax strategy, and smart long-term planning.Guest Bio:Scott Shin...

21 Mars 20241h 1min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

framgangspodden
badfluence
varvet
rss-jossan-nina
rss-svart-marknad
rss-borsens-finest
avanzapodden
svd-tech-brief
uppgang-och-fall
rss-dagen-med-di
fill-or-kill
lastbilspodden
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar
dynastin
24fragor
rss-kort-lang-analyspodden-fran-di
rss-den-nya-ekonomin
kapitalet-en-podd-om-ekonomi
bathina-en-podcast
borsmorgon