A friend who is a School Governor circulated the following to his colleagues after in a meeting in January. He raises some interesting issues, though I wish he'd talked of co-operation rathar than collaboration: sounds less sinister.
Competition versus Collaboration
The Benefits of Competition
1 I, like most school governors, am aware of the frequency
that the word “competition” and the
phrase “being competitive” crop up in school governor meetings. The “framing” (key word !) of the debate
leads us to educate our students for a
competitive job market where the better qualified candidate who performs better
in the interview (or the selection process generally) gets the job.
The UK economy needs to be “more competitive”. It needs to produce goods and services of
better quality and at lower price in order to sell in our overseas markets in
order to balance our balance of international trade. No one owes the UK plc a living and it is a
hard world out there. We need to raise our game and sharpen our elbows.
The same may be said to apply to schools. League tables are devised to enable parents
(“the consumers”) to compare local schools.
Good schools (high in the league tables) will attract students (“bums on
seats”) and each student brings with him
or her a bounty (AWPU or its successor).
Bad schools will either raise their game (i.e. competition driving
improvement) or go to the wall. Parents
deserve choice and this justifies the plurality of provision in the English
system these days - community schools,
private (so-called “public” schools), voluntary aided schools, academies and
free schools. What a bountiful market
in which the consumer can choose!
2. Does competition
have any downsides? I would argue “yes”.
In the case of schools it is possible for one school to become over-subscribed
and a neighbouring school to become under-subscribed.
There are awkward “indivisibilities” with school buildings - you cannot easily transfer accommodation
capacity to a popular school from a less
popular one. If a school is at its
admissions limit you cannot easily slip in another 15 students per year. You
cannot easily scale down the size of an “unpopular” school.
In an effort to ensure bums are on seats schools expend time
and other resources in “marketing” themselves.
Market demand is fixed (the limited size of the student population) so
marketing is necessarily a zero sum game – what my school wins, your school
loses – and vice versa.
3 Having reached point 3 I see this memo is in danger of
becoming a rambling rant, so I shall try and cut to the chase. “Competition” can have other undesirable
consequences – for example, different nations competing against each other to
attract footloose globalised companies to come to them by offering lower and
lower taxation of company profits. Here
we have a “race to the bottom”.
Similarly nations might seek to have increasingly more flexible labour
markets, meaning worsening conditions of service and remuneration for labour –
a second “race to the bottom”. Both
these examples reflect asymmetries in power structures – sovereign nations acting
independently have become no match for mighty transnational corporations
whilst trade unions have been weakened by changes in the law. Consequent on these changes are the erosion
of the corporate tax base (so that governments have to compensate by, for
example, putting up taxation on consumers) and the sharp rise in inequality of
income and wealth distribution that has taken place in the last twenty years.
4. We should not forget Tawney's adage; “Freedom for the
pike means death for the minnow”.
5. In 3 above
“acting independently” was underlined. I
see a strong argument for nations acting collectively (collaborating) in order
to counterbalance the mighty strength of global corporations that would
otherwise pay one off against the other.
Nations acted collaboratively at Bretton Woods in 1944 in devising the
IMF structure in which world trade successfully expanded 1945 to 1972. A main rationale for this structure was to
avoid the competitive devaluations that had scarred trade relations in the
1930s.
6. What is nearly always left out of the “competition”,
“employability” “paying our way as a nation” discussion is any question of what
are the limits to economic growth. In a
world of finite resources where the planet is increasingly struggling to act as
a sump for the wastes of our growing production, we need to ask “How much is
enough?”. The competitive model is
unlikely to give a globally sustainable solution – China, with its high growth
of GDP is also the nation with the fastest growing contribution to CO2
emissions. It is going to take a
serious collaborative effort between nations to tackle climate change and
leave, for our grandchildren, a world fit to live in – the sort of joint
commitment of Bretton Woods.
7. Clearly there is
a place for competition in our world – and also a place for collaboration. It strikes me at present that these two are
“out of kilter” and we need to shift the balance back more to collaboration. In our meeting in January, in answer to a
question, a member expressed the opinion
that collaboration between local secondary schools is less now than a few years
ago and this had had deleterious consequences.
Three Afterthoughts:
A . The F1 project in which
our is entered is a good example
of an appropriate balance between competition and collaboration. The teams compete against each other
for the prize on offer. In putting
together their effort the members of a team need to collaborate closely.
B. Big banks are
cheer-leaders for the benefits of competition (the free market model) and in
consequence argue for minimal regulation.
However, when it suits them, they will covertly collaborate, as is
evidenced by the LIBOR rate fixing scandal.
C. In tackling both the excesses of global capitalism and
the challenge of climate change the UK is more likely to make an effective
contribution as part of a collaborative European Union effort than on its own.
The EU collectively is a big player. For
me this constitutes an argument for continued UK membership of the EU.
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