Lol, tough that to.
Also good read, should be mandatory for any whinny bitchy politicans and people who complain about our countries. Yes it can get better, but its already good.
FUEL ON FIRE TLDR: Denmark out of all scandinavien countries, Germany to, has the least reason for a person to work, as the media spins it (Old news really), cause of our big welfare to unemployed people.
Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/djuntas ARPG - RTS - MMO
"In order to maintain a tolerant society, the society must be intolerant of intolerance." Paradox of tolerance
I'm not quite sure what you're trying to get at here, but it seems like you think that getting into university would net you a decent job no matter your degree or quality. That is untrue, at least for Norway. University is tough, and so is the job market. Both Norway and Sweden has international job markets, meaning that you might be competing against Engineers for instance from other countries. Gone is the day when you only compete against your own "kind".
I would rather employ someone who has a degree, no matter whether his grades is sub-par, rather than someone who wasted 3 years of his life doing nothing except working on the local supermarket. One thing that is true in Norway, is that grades has very little to say when it comes to your future job. It is your personality and the way you're promoting yourself that would be getting you a job. For Engineers in Norway, only 1% of the employers finds grades to be important. That is rather significant, and I think this is what you're trying to get at here.
One thing you would need to consider is whether you're a practical or a theoretical person. Most of those who graduate with sub-par grades would actually tend to be the best persons for the job. Most of them are learning-by-doing, rather than being told what is good and what is bad and memorize that. I were an A-level student myself, and I've studied in Singapore and currently working on a second degree on the side. I've studied and worked with a ton of people who had rather poor grades, but they tend to surpass me in many fields even though my grades tell me I should be ahead. So what I'm trying to say is that grades is not everything. As long as you get the basics in, then the practical work will be your testing ground. You do not graduate as an engineer, you become one through work and time.
The problem with larger countries is that there's too much competition, and most of the time only grades will be your way to stand out. Therefore, those who do not have the "appropriate" grades would be thrown away. Which leads back to my earlier conclusion. You might end up with a theoretical person who have no knowledge as to how he would implement it. You might get lucky, and end up with a genius. As long as the company has the availability in order for people to actually adjust, then most people would be able to become the person the company wanted.
Norway is the leading business within pretty much everything regarding offshore operations (subsea and so on), including ship design and such. This knowledge and expertise was created through combining a large range of people from different background and grades and form something new and innovative. I could point out my little town, which has a mere 7000 inhabitants. From this tiny maritime cluster, you have the headquarter of companies like Rolls-Royce Marine and such. This was not created by the selective minded who only tend to look at your grades.
My experience so far in life is that grades is not everything. An interview would often show your strengths and weaknesses beyond your grades. Most jobs also has a 6-12 months trial period, within this period you'll have to show yourself. If you do end up being of no use to the company, there's no problem for them to just fire you.
Getting into university is another thing. There are rather high standards in order to get in.
Last edited by Pancha; 2013-02-04 at 04:24 PM.
The article's main point was "pragmatism over ideology". Some here seem to have missed that.
I for one look forward to the day when free markets and state control will cease to be regarded as religions and more as different tools that might prove useful in the right situation.
There is a lack of Doctors, we get people from all over Europe coming here to work as doctors(some have to compliment their exams from their home country), as well as elswhere in the world, because we activly try to recruit since there is a domestic shortage. The last 15 years we have on average "imported" around 330 more doctors per year then what we have "exported", you are arguing against basic supply and demand, one of the core fundations of capitalism.
They are working on increasing the amount of qualified doctors by
A. recruiting from abroad
B. increase the number of open university spots
C. Get swedes to educate themselves abroad and come back home.
All these 3 methods work well for us but there is still a shortage atm.
Edit: And what Cata said.
Last edited by Jackmoves; 2013-02-04 at 04:49 PM.
The nerve is called the "nerve of awareness". You cant dissect it. Its a current that runs up the center of your spine. I dont know if any of you have sat down, crossed your legs, smoked DMT, and watch what happens... but what happens to me is this big thing goes RRRRRRRRRAAAAAWWW! up my spine and flashes in my brain... well apparently thats whats going to happen if I do this stuff...
Missed this, yeah there are a lot of young Swedes working in Norway but it's hard to say how high youth unemployment is tbh, if you define that with people who are doing "nothing". We use the system UN's International Labour Organization(only way to do it if you want to compare unemployment with other countries) got, which means a full time student would be considered unemployed as long as they are out looking for a job on the side or want to work extra. I'm all for a student working during their studies, I do that myself, but a full time student does not really "need" to work(I think they should though), since they got their student grant and the student loan.
So there are a couple of ways to calculate it.
The official way used by Statistics Sweden:
149 300 people / 652 100 people = 22,9 % unemployed
Youth unemployment excluding full time students in the workforce, age 15-24
(149 300- 66 600)/ (652 100- 66 600)= 14,1 % unemployed
Youth unemployment excluding full time students in the entire population, age 15-24
(149 300 people – 66 600 people ) / 1 244 200 people = 6,6 % unemployed
So it depends on how one defines unemployed. Which also different political parties will try to use to their advantage ;P
Here is a full read(in Swedish)
http://www.ekonomifakta.se/sv/stand-...tsstatistiken/
The big problem is during the summer, since a lot of students want a summer job.
Last edited by Jackmoves; 2013-02-04 at 06:12 PM.
The nerve is called the "nerve of awareness". You cant dissect it. Its a current that runs up the center of your spine. I dont know if any of you have sat down, crossed your legs, smoked DMT, and watch what happens... but what happens to me is this big thing goes RRRRRRRRRAAAAAWWW! up my spine and flashes in my brain... well apparently thats whats going to happen if I do this stuff...