Subtitles section Play video
-
This video is sponsored by Skillshare.
-
Use the link in the description to watch my course or thousands of others with a free
-
two-month trial.
-
In 2018, the U.S. imported $540 billion worth of goods from China, but exported only 120.
-
In response, President Trump imposed tariffs, immediately shaking the Chinese, American,
-
and, therefore, world, economies.
-
But while the trade war defines today's economy, another deficit will decide tomorrow's.
-
In the 2017-18 school year, 363,000 Chinese students came to study in the U.S., while
-
only 24,000 Americans went to China.
-
This, on the surface, isn't all that surprising.
-
What's weird - really weird - is how fast it happened.
-
All of a sudden, starting in 2007, Chinese students in the U.S. absolutely exploded,
-
accounting for 93% of all international student growth in the last decade.
-
More students come from China to America than the next six countries combined, including
-
India, despite having almost the same size population.
-
So, why so many?
-
Why so sudden?
-
And is the U.S. right to worry about incoming spies?
-
The answer has less to do with academics and more with economics, complex social dynamics,
-
and, above all, politics.
-
On June 7th, Chinese cities become… eerily quiet.
-
Traffic is as busy as ever but no horns are honking, stress is collectively unusually
-
high, free water bottles are handed out, and drones watch overhead.
-
Today, tomorrow, and sometimes, on a third day, 10 million students across China take
-
the National Higher Education Entrance Exam, aka the Gaokao, aka, the most important nine
-
hours of a Chinese person's life.
-
The test covers Chinese language and literature, math, foreign language (usually English),
-
and a choice of social or natural science.
-
The top roughly 7-million scorers are admitted to college, and a select few are offered places
-
in the C9 - mainland China's equivalent to the Ivy-League.
-
But unlike the SAT, AP, or IB, Gaokao scores are really the only factor in Chinese college
-
admissions.
-
The first 18 years of your life, therefore, are dedicated to preparation.
-
Leading up to the big test, parents burn incense, pray, and book hotels near the exam to avoid
-
traffic.
-
Students sometimes study with IV drips.
-
Some, known as “Gaokao migrants”, travel to other provinces with higher admissions
-
quotas in hopes of having a slight advantage.
-
When the day finally comes, provincial governments order quiet streets for concentration and
-
fly drones to catch cheaters.
-
Supporters of the Gaokao say it levels the playing field - creating a meritocracy wherein
-
any student, from any geographic or socioeconomic part of China has the same opportunity for
-
social mobility.
-
Critics, in turn, argue a level playing field is only ever an illusion - that success is
-
handed to those with families wealthy enough to afford private tutors.
-
Like continued middle-class growth, the national exam is both a practical and political tool
-
for maintaining stability - shifting questions of who has power and who is entitled to riches
-
onto the individual.
-
The extreme, sometimes insurmountable stress, they say, doesn't even produce good citizens
-
or employees.
-
While Chinese students rank very highly in math and science, they're often seen as
-
lacking in other skills like creative and critical thinking, a side effect of their
-
rigid education system.
-
Classrooms are dominated by the teacher, who lectures behind a podium to a sea of totally-silent
-
students expected to memorize as much as possible.
-
To ask questions is both to disrespect your teacher and admit to your peers that you don't
-
understand the material.
-
Finally, discipline is placed above all else, with low performers at one high school not
-
being allowed air conditioning.
-
For any number of these reasons, some, disenchanted parents seek a way out.
-
If their child performs poorly on his or her high school entrance exam, rather than lose
-
face, families may place them in international schools, designed to prepare them for exams
-
like the SAT, instead.
-
Others pursue an education abroad with the intent of eventually migrating the whole family,
-
or, simply, for more opportunity.
-
The perception is that, while school in China is more intense up until the Gaokao, afterward,
-
students feel they've satisfied their family's expectations and can relax at university,
-
whereas American college is when students start getting serious.
-
In other words, students leave China on their parents' suggestion, who usually pay their
-
tuition.
-
And pay, do they!
-
There are English lessons, extracurriculars for admissions, exam fees, and travel costs.
-
On top of that, families pay agencies about $10,000 per child for help in the process.
-
In other words, this is only possible thanks to China's rising, newly-wealthy middle-class,
-
and the demographics which leave parents with only one child to pay for - and, more importantly,
-
only one chance to get it right.
-
The truly wealthy get started even earlier - sending their child to an elite American
-
feeder middle school, which can charge up to 60, $70,000 a year.
-
And when old fashion studying doesn't work, upper-class families resort to “gifts”
-
- usually about $250,000, and as much as $6.5 million.
-
There's one more, unexpected reason Chinese students come to America…
-
When Deng Xiaoping began opening up the country in the '80s and '90s, creating thousands
-
of newly rich families, he also, for the first time, allowed students to study overseas.
-
For this reason, the first international students who returned to China were its most well-off,
-
launching high-paying, high-profile careers.
-
This association of studying in America and success in life has never faded.
-
So, while the American Dream may not be alive and well in America, it certainly is in Beijing.
-
Americans have Louis Vuitton, McMansions, and Porsche's.
-
Chinese people have Harvard and Yale.
-
One hospital in central China even named its maternity wards after Ivy-League schools for
-
good luck.
-
All of these factors help explain this, but they don't justify this.
-
Why did it all happen so fast?
-
To answer that, we need to understand how schools really make money.
-
Broadly speaking, in the U.S., there are two university business models.
-
The first way a school can make money is simple: charging students.
-
Private schools are the Apple of education - they forgo massive market share in exchange
-
for a smaller number of higher-paying students.
-
And, because they attract high-income families, they can expect good, lifelong customers - aka
-
endowments!
-
On the other hand, the way public schools pay the bills is a little less obvious.
-
Lower tuition is made up for by state and federal funding - aka, everyone's favorite,
-
taxes!
-
Government subsidizing is great - when it's great.
-
Low prices grant low-income families access to a great education.
-
The problem is that state and federal governments have other priorities and are subject to economic
-
downturns.
-
During the 2008 recession, Americans spent and made less money, governments collected
-
less revenue, and colleges received less funding.
-
From 2008 to 13, states alone lost out on $283 billion.
-
Now, ten years later, most of us have long forgotten the recession - but not universities.
-
Still in 2018, state funding for higher education was down 13% from before the crisis.
-
So, as government subsidies fell, schools immediately turned to a new subsidy - international
-
tuition.
-
The current model is one where colleges can segment prices without appearing to discriminate.
-
In other words, tuition is set very high, but aid is handed out very generously.
-
The average full-time undergraduate in 2017-18 received nearly $15,000 in total aid.
-
But while something like 85% of students receive some amount of financial aid, international
-
students almost always pay full price.
-
At Michigan State University, for example, in-state freshmen pay $25,064 a year for tuition,
-
fees, room, and board.
-
Out-of-state residents pay just over double, and international students pay $9,133 on top
-
of that.
-
Across America, an international student generates about twice as much revenue as an in-state
-
resident.
-
Students also complain about a so-called “International Tax”, where schools place a greater emphasis
-
on English courses to prolong their studies.
-
Increasingly, Chinese students find themselves caught between two worlds…
-
As more and more students return home, 30% in 2007, but 80% today, they're often disappointed
-
by what they find.
-
While English is still very valuable and many find high-paying jobs in America, the rest,
-
“Haigui”, as they're known in Chinese, have a disadvantage.
-
One study found U.S. diploma-holders were 18% less likely to receive a call back from
-
potential employers than Chinese ones.
-
On the other hand, they may also feel isolated and unwelcome in America.
-
Because schools tend only to keep one or two dorms open during breaks, during which international
-
students tend to stay on campus, they get placed in the same dorms, have less opportunity
-
to perfect their language skills, and a harder time socializing outside their bubble.
-
At the same time, some Chinese students are experiencing delayed or rejected visas and
-
accusations of espionage.
-
The fear stems from Confucius Institutes or Chinese Student and Scholars Associations,
-
groups set-up by or associated with China's Communist Party on American campuses.
-
Officially, their goal is to help Chinese students acclimate abroad - like, by organizing
-
parties around Chinese New Year.
-
Chinese embassies also create WeChat groups to organize students, even paying them to
-
welcome Xi Jinping during his 2015 visit to Washington.
-
Several Chinese students and faculty have been arrested or fired in recent years for
-
alleged spying or failing to disclose connections to China.
-
According to sources, President Trump seriously considered banning all Chinese students completely,
-
only narrowly deciding against it after an ambassador pointed out how it would harm American
-
schools.
-
Students in STEM fields, in other words, most Chinese students, are already subject to additional
-
scrutiny.
-
The truth is, visa issues are not yet widespread, and the U.S. government has, at times, even
-
encouraged Chinese arrivals, with Trump declaring “We want to have Chinese students (go) to
-
our great schools and great universities.
-
They are great students and tremendous assets”.
-
Regardless, issues are common enough to create a perception of risk, leading to an 8% drop
-
of international students in 2018, who increasingly choose other countries like Canada or affordable
-
Thailand.
-
The University of Illinois went so far as to take out a $424,000 insurance policy in
-
case of a significant drop in Chinese students.
-
The U.S. can and should be worried about Chinese influence on campuses.
-
Their free, open-minded approach has the potentially dangerous side-effect of also creating a vulnerable
-
hole easily filled by nationalist propaganda.
-
There has never been a better time in history to be wary of China's influence abroad.
-
But there has also never been a more important moment to be cautious about conflating a government
-
and its ideology with 1.4 billion individuals.
-
Suspecting everyone of espionage leaves America economically and culturally weaker, not stronger.
-
Every year, Chinese students contribute $15 billion to the U.S. economy.
-
Education is now Australia's third-largest export, more than tourism, and behind only
-
iron and coal.
-
But whether economically useful or not, cultural exchanges act as a countervailing force to
-
propaganda - both exposing Chinese nationals to a wider intellectual world and American
-
citizens to foreign cultures.
-
The fact that America has so many high-ranking, sought-after institutions - where even Xi
-
Jinping sends his daughter - is a massive diplomatic advantage that risks being wasted
-
if foreigners aren't welcome.
-
When students return to China, these schools often constitute their entire conception of
-
America, the one that spreads to friends, family, and, eventually, decision-makers.
-
Cutting off Chinese students may help win today's trade war, but welcoming them is
-
the only way to stop tomorrow's conflicts before they even begin.
-
While not everyone can leave their country and study abroad, we all have access to some
-
of the most interesting classes online with Skillshare!
-
For example, maybe after watching “The Magic of In-N-Out”, you want to start your own
-
business - this course can help you create an amazing logo for it.
-
Perhaps you want to avoid a marketing disaster like Huawei, in which case, you should watch
-
these brand strategy courses from the experts.
-
Whatever you want to learn - like design, business, or investing - Skillshare has thousands
-
of classes to teach you.
-
You can try Skillshare today with a 2-month free trial using the link in the description.
-
After that, an annual subscription is less than $10 bucks a month.
-
Thanks to Skillshare, and to you for watching!