tchan001 wrote:Go is one of the four virtuous arts of Asia...
Many people in Asian cultures know and respect this game even if they don't play it.
This.
Here are typical reactions to the statement, "I am a Go pro." --
in China: Oh. You must be pretty smart.
in Japan: Wow!
in the US: *
Blank stare*
Go is
culture in Asia, not unlike classical music or ballet in the West.
(So it's interesting to compare Go with the NFL, just like it is to
compare chess with the NFL, with TV fees the order of US $20 Billion:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NFL_on_television 
)
If a child in the US wants to pursue classical music or ballet as a career,
she and her parents would have to go through some decision process.
If a child in Asia wants to pursue Go as a career, it's similar.
The location of the school (which country to study music/ballet/Go)
is naturally part of this decision process.
Recently I heard this story: when Sakata Eio (more knowledgeable people please
correct me if it was another person) was a child studying at a Go school,
his father once asked the teacher whether he was good enough to make pro.
The teacher replied, "I'm teaching him this very nice
art.
If you want to continue, do it; if not, don't! Don't ask me stupid questions."
Of course, this teacher's reaction may be unusual (but so was Sakata!);
another teacher might have given his honest opinion of the prospects.
And of course, given the financial investment and especially in these
economic times, it's a big decision to make.
But the teacher still had a point. Even if a child spends a few years
as an insei in Japan, or at a Go school in China or Korea, and does not make pro
for whatever reasons, those few years are not wasted.
There's (tremendous) value in the whole experience.