Democracy Gone Astray

Democracy, being a human construct, needs to be thought of as directionality rather than an object. As such, to understand it requires not so much a description of existing structures and/or other related phenomena but a declaration of intentionality.
This blog aims at creating labeled lists of published infringements of such intentionality, of points in time where democracy strays from its intended directionality. In addition to outright infringements, this blog also collects important contemporary information and/or discussions that impact our socio-political landscape.

All the posts here were published in the electronic media – main-stream as well as fringe, and maintain links to the original texts.

[NOTE: Due to changes I haven't caught on time in the blogging software, all of the 'Original Article' links were nullified between September 11, 2012 and December 11, 2012. My apologies.]

Thursday, July 26, 2012

The Big Jobs Myth: American Workers Aren't Ready for American Jobs

A specter haunts the job market. You've witnessed it on the campaign trail. You've seen it on TV. It is the idea that the skills of U.S. workers don't match the needs of the nation's employers.

This "skills mismatch" is routinely held up to explain why the unemployment rate is still at 8.2% three years after the Great Recession officially ended, and why nearly half of those out of work have been so for more than six months. The Romney campaign affirms that the skills mismatch "lies at the heart of our jobs crisis." In his State of the Union speech, President Obama quoted conversations with businessmen who can't find qualified workers, and then proposed "a national commitment to train two million Americans with skills that will lead directly to a job."

It is heart-warming to see Democrats and Republicans agree, but unfortunate that the thing they agree about may not be true.

In recent months, researchers from the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, the University of California-Berkeley, and the Wharton School have expressed skepticism about the existence of a national skills mismatch. A larger body of work, stretching back decades, paints a murky picture about how broad-based a problem worker skill level is. Despite this, policymakers have fretted about the issue for 30 years, in periods of high unemployment and low. If the research is far from certain, why does the skills-mismatch narrative stay with us? And by fixating on mismatched skills, are we ignoring a far bigger problem for the economy?

UNDER-QUALIFIED OR OVER-QUALIFIED?

History is a useful place to start looking for answers. Concern about missing skill arose in the early 1980s as an increasing gap in pay between college graduates and everyone else led economists to believe that the demand for skill was outstripping its supply -- largely, it seemed, because automation and computers boosted the need for white-collar workers over blue-collar ones. At the same time, a series of government-commissioned reports questioned America's broader work-readiness. The Department of Education's 1983 A Nation at Risk and the Department of Labor's 1987 Workforce 2000 held forth about declining American standards, with the latter concluding that "the drastic reduction in the availability of qualified young labor force entrants... may imperil the nation's competitive position."

That public discourse in the 1980s landed on the idea of a vastly under-skilled labor force is curious, considering that less than a decade earlier, policymakers believed that over-qualification was the main threat as technology "deskilled" work. In the 1976 book The Overeducated American, economist Richard Freeman held that the then-falling wage difference between high-school and college graduates was the result of a college-graduate glut. Sociologists studying "credentialism" agreed, arguing that inflated hiring requirements had led U.S. workers to obtain more education than was necessary. A 1973 report by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare ruminated about how to keep employees happy when job complexity increasingly lagged workers' abilities and expectations for challenging jobs.

What accounts for the turnabout? One possibility is that the quality of the American workforce fell off a cliff at the end of the 1970s. Another is that what changed was how we view the relationship between workers, skills, and jobs. For instance, at a Department of Labor "skills summit" in 2000, then-Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan described a shift in thinking about who bears responsibility for developing and updating workers' skills, explaining that over the past few decades, on-the-job training had given way to formal education programs -- those that would, presumably, turn out fully qualified workers in advance of having a job. As that responsibility shifted, so might have our definition of what it means to be adequately skilled.

Data can help tease apart the difference. One way academics try to detect a potential mismatch is by analyzing the average pay of people with different levels of education. From the days of Richard Freeman on, this sort of research has held enormous sway over popular thinking. Most recently, Harvard economists Claudia Goldin and Lawrence Katz have argued that since the late 19th century, spikes in the pay of highly educated people relative to other workers corresponds with a dearth of well-educated people in the workforce -- and that this is the sort of world we've been living in since 1980. In other words, the skills mismatch is real.

But other approaches have produced different results. A second body of work zooms in to the level of the individual worker and individual job, and assesses whether each person has more or less education -- or another proxy for skill, such as reading or math ability -- than his job requires. The findings here are decidedly more nuanced. While certain pockets of workers, such as high-school drop-outs, clearly lack necessary skill, no nation-wide mismatch emerges. In fact, some work, such as an analysis by Duke University's Stephen Vaisey, finds that over-qualification is much more common than under-qualification, particularly among younger workers and those with college degrees.

WHO IS MISSING WHAT SKILLS?

Of course, popular beliefs don't only come from data analysis. As the President's State of the Union remarks illustrate, companies are influential in bolstering the skills mismatch narrative. Corporate chiefs such as General Electric's Jeffrey Immelt, American Express's Kenneth Chenault, and Intel's Paul Otellini frequently ring in on the nation's op-ed pages, as members of commissions and panels, and in private. Executives particularly like to talk about a lack of qualified employees in manufacturing and engineering, but those aren't the only industries that elicit complaints. A survey of more than 1,300 firms conducted by the employment agency Manpower earlier this year found that 49% of employers have trouble filling positions.

Dig deeper into what employers say, though, and the skills mismatch gets complicated. A 2011 employer survey from the Manufacturing Institute found that the top skill deficiency among manufacturing workers was "inadequate problem-solving skills." No. 3 on the list was "inadequate basic employability skills (attendance timeliness, work ethic, etc.)." In the 2012 Manpower survey, 26% of employers complained about the lack of such "soft skills." If the American workforce doesn't show up on time or think outside the box, that may be a problem -- but probably not one solved by more math, science, and technical training, the go-to remedies.

The Manpower survey also suggests another possibility. When firms were asked why they have difficulty hiring, 55% picked "lack of available applicants," but essentially the same percentage, 54%, said candidates are "looking for more pay than is offered" (many more than the 40% selecting lack of "hard" skill). This is an important reminder that the labor market is a market. The U.S. conversation revolves around whether workers have the right skills. Whether firms are willing to pay enough to compensate workers for having acquired those skills is rarely mentioned. When firms post job openings at a certain wage and no one comes forward, we call this a skills mismatch. In a different universe, we might call it a pay mismatch.

In a new book, University of Pennsylvania business professor Peter Cappelli offers a different take, arguing that a big part of the reason American firms feel as if they can't find qualified workers is because of overly restrictive hiring practices. Based on interviews with personnel managers and others, he describes procedures that screen out anyone without precisely the right academic qualifications, job descriptions that include so many different roles that finding one person to fill the slot is practically impossible, and employers who aren't willing to hire people without specific past job titles, even if those people are otherwise experienced enough for the job.

EVERYBODY'S FAVORITE EXCUSE

And so we are left with a puzzle. If there is no clear-cut evidence of a broad-based skills mismatch and plenty of competing theories for what ails the job market, then why do we so often fall back on the story of skills? A few dynamics are likely at play.

First, the skills mismatch is a simple tale to tell. There is a thing called a worker and a thing called a job, and they may or may not match on skill level. The messy truth of the workplace, that workers and jobs are deeply interactive -- that a person's ability to perform well often depends on his colleagues, how much autonomy his position allows, and the relative rewards for taking risks and playing it safe -- is conveniently set aside. It is difficult to explain, let alone fix, macroeconomic factors like weak aggregate demand. Believing that workers don't know how to do jobs right is easy to grasp and, on its surface, easy to remedy: everyone gets more education and training.

Second, the notion that workers lack skill is one that rings true to many people who have ever tried to fill a job opening. It's not hard to find anecdotes about firms posting positions and getting a lackluster response. But extrapolating from personal experience -- especially the sort of personal experience that is likely to stick out in one's mind as a frustration -- and concluding that a national trend is afoot is tricky business. That's why we have nationally representative employer surveys and large data sets that researchers spend years systematically analyzing.

Third, and perhaps most importantly, the concept of the skills mismatch neatly serves many ideological masters.

As sociologist Michael Handel points out in his book Worker Skills and Job Requirements, in the skills mismatch debate, it is often not clear who is missing what skill. The term is used to talk about technical manufacturing know-how, doctoral-grade engineering talent, high-school level knowledge of reading and math, interpersonal smoothness, facility with personal computers, college credentials, problem-solving ability, and more. Depending on the conversation, the problem lies with high-school graduates, high-school drop-outs, college graduates without the right majors, college graduates without the right experience, new entrants to the labor force, older workers, or younger workers. Since the problem is hazily defined, people with vastly different agendas are able to get in on the conversation--and the solution.

The skills mismatch trope also offers a little something for everyone politically. Those on the right get to talk about taking personal responsibility for upgrading one's skills, while those on the left get to emphasize how we must do a better job with education, that great pathway to an egalitarian society. Between the two sit the nation's employers, who get an argument for sharing labor-training costs with government agencies, non-profits, and institutions of higher education; it would hardly be fair to expect them to bear the full burden if the American workforce itself is defective. Finally, a fast-growing industry of for-profit colleges get reassurance that their student pipeline will stay full.

BUSTING THE MYTH

The truth that is unfortunately lost amid so much harmony is that individual-level skill doesn't exist in a vacuum. Many employment structures -- from pay scales to hiring practices -- sit outside of the control of workers, yet nonetheless help determine whether they get hired. What individuals can generally control is the amount and type of education and training they receive. The trend there is certainly to acquire more, but an arms race for education brings with it a whole host of other problems, such as crushing student-debt loads, which are particularly worrisome if a big reason for getting a degree is simply to make it through a firm's hiring algorithms.

An over-emphasis on education as the pathway to more jobs may be problematic in another way. Attending school has always brought a variety of advantages -- Thomas Jefferson wanted universal public education to create better citizens, not better workers. In many cases, the sorts of "skills" employers want -- problem-solving, creativity -- demand better thinking and communication, the types of abilities one picks up in English, history, and arts classes. Yet by drawing a direct line from coursework to jobs, these are exactly the areas of curriculum that get tossed aside for more industry-specific concerns. In other words, the implications of understanding workforce quality through the lens of the "skills mismatch," and positioning education as the solution, could be far-ranging.

We can ask plenty of questions about whether all of this is efficient or fair. Answering such questions is not easy, but one thing is certain: We're not even asking them. For 30 years the notion of the skills mismatch has factored prominently in national thinking about what is the wrong with the labor market. Yet the motivations and implications of that debate have gone largely unexamined. How an issue is framed helps determine winners and losers--and when a way of looking at the world benefits so many, it typically isn't challenged. But if that way of looking at the world is faulty, then it ought to be challenged, particularly when it is something both major Presidential candidates believe.

Original Article
Source: the atlantic
Author: Barbara Kiviat

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