CO129-543-9 Hong Kong University- technical education 28-2-1933 - 7-11-1933 — Page 27

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All

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But again, considerable light is shed on the problem

of putting our engineering graduates "through the mill,

by simply emphasising the word "through." What induce-

ment has a graduate to enter the industrial mill when he

has no visible prospect of emerging from it into an in-

teresting or remunerative career? Will four years' hard

work at the University, followed by three or four years

of dirty work in the industrial world, bring him higher

remuneration than that of a local chauffeur or superior

house boy?

Of

The plain fact is that the fundamental cause of the

"white collar menace" is to be found in the shameless

wages hitherto offered to technically qualified men.

what avail are the familiar jibes against "white collar

men" (made by critics who are themselves usually just

successful exponents of "white collar" philosophy), when

superior qualifications, arduously acquired, receive such

scant recognition and reward?

It is a sinister confession of the Singapore Committee

(See G.R. Para. 30) that they see no prospects for tech-

nical education in Malaya, (even when no fees are charged!)

"until the struggle for existence grows more acute."

Equally sinister are the complaints of some local

authorities, quoted in G.R. Para. 71, that all workers

who, by acquiring a few scraps of general education, can

escape from industrial thraldom into the freer air of

clerking, store-keeping, or domestic service, make haste

to do so. How very low must the Building Trade in Hong

Kong be when a little reduction of illiteracy raises the

workers above it! (G.R. Para. 94).

We commend to employers who are thus perplexed a

reading of the books of Henry Ford.

P.T.0.

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