For example Forbes writer Rich Karlgaard says The Skills Gap Exists.
Karlgaard believes the "gap is sure to grow as the population ages and industries from health care to manufacturing are altered by technology. Outsourcing to China won�t be the answer, either. Its population is aging the fastest of all the major economies."
Vicki Needham writing for The Hill says Skills gap is hampering labor market.
Needham, citing a report by Deloitte says "job creation in the United States is hampered by a lack of highly skilled and adaptable workers whose talents don't match current job openings".
The Atlantic comments on Solving the Manufacturing Skills Gap.
Eighty percent of the manufacturing companies in the United States say they cannot find enough workers with the proper skills to fill open positions at their facilities. That's the number President Barack Obama cited, as he announced the Military-to-Civilian Skills Certification Program, in June 2012.Skills Don't Pay the Bills
"If you can maintain the most advanced weapons in the world, if you're an electrician on a Navy ship, well, you can manufacture the next generation of advanced technology in our factories like this one," Obama said, speaking from the floor of a Honeywell plant in Minnesota.
But the problem is that veterans have had trouble getting hired, as Obama said, "simply because they don't have the civilian licenses or certifications that a lot of companies require."
The above columnists express widely believed economic hooey.
In contrast, Adam Davidson, in his New York Times column, Skills Don�t Pay the Bills, precisely summarizes the problem in four deep thoughts.
Deep Thoughts
- There is no skills gap.
- Who will operate a highly sophisticated machine for $10 an hour?
- Not a lot of people.
- As a result, there is going to be a skills gap.
Davidson visited the engineering technology program at Queensborough Community College in New York City led by instructor Joseph Goldenberg whose manufacturing classroom consisted of "nothing but computers".
With that introduction, inquiring minds tune in a bit closer to some snips from Davidson.
Nearly six million factory jobs, almost a third of the entire manufacturing industry, have disappeared since 2000. And while many of these jobs were lost to competition with low-wage countries, even more vanished because of computer-driven machinery that can do the work of 10, or in some cases, 100 workers. Those jobs are not coming back, but many believe that the industry�s future (and, to some extent, the future of the American economy) lies in training a new generation for highly skilled manufacturing jobs � the ones that require people who know how to run the computer that runs the machine.Situation in a Nutshell
Running these machines requires a basic understanding of metallurgy, physics, chemistry, pneumatics, electrical wiring and computer code. It also requires a worker with the ability to figure out what�s going on when the machine isn�t working properly. And aspiring workers often need to spend a considerable amount of time and money taking classes like Goldenberg�s to even be considered. Every one of Goldenberg�s students, he says, will probably have a job for as long as he or she wants one.
And yet, even as classes like Goldenberg�s are filled to capacity all over America, hundreds of thousands of U.S. factories are starving for skilled workers. Throughout the campaign, President Obama lamented the so-called skills gap and referenced a study claiming that nearly 80 percent of manufacturers have jobs they can�t fill. Mitt Romney made similar claims. The National Association of Manufacturers estimates that there are roughly 600,000 jobs available for whoever has the right set of advanced skills.
The secret behind this skills gap is that it�s not a skills gap at all. I spoke to several other factory managers who also confessed that they had a hard time recruiting in-demand workers for $10-an-hour jobs. �It�s hard not to break out laughing,� says Mark Price, a labor economist at the Keystone Research Center, referring to manufacturers complaining about the shortage of skilled workers. �If there�s a skill shortage, there has to be rises in wages,� he says. �It�s basic economics.� After all, according to supply and demand, a shortage of workers with valuable skills should push wages up. Yet according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the number of skilled jobs has fallen and so have their wages.
Goldenberg, who has taught for more than 20 years, is already seeing it up close. Few of his top students want to work in factories for current wages.
It�s easy to understand every perspective in this drama. Manufacturers, who face increasing competition from low-wage countries, feel they can�t afford to pay higher wages. Potential workers choose more promising career paths. �It�s individually rational,� says Howard Wial, an economist at the Brookings Institution who specializes in manufacturing employment.
- Companies cannot afford to pay so much that they lose money.
- Companies would rather invest in technology and robots to reduce the need for labor, than to pay workers more money
- A shift manager at McDonald's can make $14 an hour, comparable to what manufacturing jobs pay
- Union wages and benefits are a major problem
High Cost of Education
The problem is actually quite a bit deeper. Given the preposterously high cost of education in the US, students graduate from college with an expectation they need to make more than they can to pay off student debt.
The same holds true (and even more so) for those going back to school as well as those attending for profit colleges such as the University of Phoenix.
Here are a few eye openers:
Education Bubble: Student Loan Debt Passes Credit Card Debt, Expected to Hit $1 Trillion
Debt for Diploma Schemes: Debt for Diploma Schemes and the Cookie Monster Principle
Off-Balance-Sheet Budget Fraud: Budget Deficit Accounting Fraud and the Off-Balance-Sheet Student Loan Scam; Time to Scrap Entire Student Loan Program
Pell Grant Debt Zombies: For Profit Schools Turn Students Into Debt Zombies; It's Time To Kill The Entire Pell Grant Program
Buried in Debt: Subprime Goes to College; Students Buried in Debt; Who is to Blame?
Living Wage Nonsense
Keynesian and Monetarist clowns conclude that wages are not high enough. The masses lament for "living wages".
The problem is not that wages are too low, but rather costs are too high. Ben Bernanke, president Obama, union sympathizers and other misguided fools seek to drive wages up.
The results are what any rational person should expect: loss of jobs to Asia, loss of jobs to technology, prices rising faster than wages, and overall debt soaring to the moon.
Reflections on Affordable Housing, Education, Medicine
There are hundreds of "affordable housing" programs. Every damn one of them drove costs higher by artificially creating demand right up until the pool of greater fools ran out. Then, as soon as housing crashed, government and the Fed made a concerted effort to drive back up prices.
In effect, no one really wanted affordable housing. Rather they all wanted "affordable housing slush funds".
The same holds true for education and health care.
Why is the Middle Class Shrinking?
The simple fact of the matter is there is absolutely nothing wrong with falling prices. Indeed the average guy on the street would welcome falling prices. The Fed, however, says no.
The first result of Fed policy (coupled of course with Fractional Reserve Lending) is rising prices of essential goods and services coupled with falling real wages.
The second result of Fed policy was a real estate and financial asset crash.
The third result of Fed policy is reduced demand for credit (which constitutes deflation in my book).
Since the Fed never learns, we have seen reckless rounds of QE following reckless rounds of QE hoping to stimulate jobs and lending. Yet, people actually wonder "Why the middle class is shrinking"
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
"Wine Country" Economic Conference Hosted By Mish
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