Monday, February 4, 2013
Monday, February 4, 2013
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Training needed to redesign job market

Training the youth for the challenges of a fast-changing world has to be central to any strategy to rebuild the job market following a financial crisis that's wiped out millions of middle-class jobs over the past five years.

That was the central conclusion that emerged from the annual Associated Press debate at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss village of Davos, which focused on the need to build up skills for a changing economy.

"We need a young labor force," IMF Deputy Managing Director Min Zhu said. "Government doesn't pay enough attention to training and retraining."

Amid concerns that the rich world is faced with a lost generation of young people with dismal job prospects, panelists suggested other ideas in the debate that was moderated by the AP's senior managing editor for U.S. news, Michael Oreskes. Proposals included the creation of "green" jobs to save the planet from climate catastrophe and lowering the costs of hiring first-time workers.

The International Labor Organization estimates that young people are three times more likely to be unemployed than adults, and that worldwide around 75 million youths aged between 15 and 24 are looking for work. This youth employment crisis, it says, threatens to scar "the very fabric of our societies."

Eric Cantor, a Republican Congressman from Virginia, said training is needed to give workers the tools they need for the "new labor force."

"America is a huge catalyst for growth," he said. "Workers need to be trained to get into those jobs."

He warned, however, against piling more government money on schools without coming up with a "better way" to create new skills.

An Associated Press analysis of employment data from 20 countries found that millions of mid-skill, mid-pay jobs have already disappeared over the past five years — jobs that form the backbone of the middle class in developed countries.

That experience has left a growing number of technology experts and economists pondering whether middle-class jobs will return when the global economy recovers, or whether they have been lost forever.

Italian Finance Minister Vittorio Grilli, also at the debate, argued that technology doesn't have to be the enemy, and "will provide a second wind to advanced economies."

Young people in the job market don't all feel they're getting education that fits today's demand.

"The quality of courses is not up to standard at all," said Lucy Nicholls, a 22-year-old fashion graduate in London. She was speaking Friday in a Google hangout video chat as part of AP's Class of 2012, an exploration of Europe's financial crisis through the eyes of young graduates facing the worst downturn the continent has seen since the end of World War II.

Emerging markets may offer some ideas to the developed world in its new jobs conundrum.

Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan, whose country has generated 4.6 million jobs over the past five years, credited the performance on a host of innovative policies, such as paying the wages of some young people when they first enter the workforce.

"The biggest problem is the cost of entry to the job market," he said. "If an employer thinks it is less expensive to hire, then employment becomes easier."

Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz suggested focusing on "green, renewable jobs" to help solve the youth unemployment crisis as well as the planet.

In Europe, where youth unemployment is a huge issue, particularly in Greece and Spain where the rate stands at over 50 percent, the job market overhaul will not be easy and certainly won't be fast.

"It's a slow process and unfortunately it's going to be a painful one," Italy's Grilli said. "It involves people changing their lives."

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

JOHN HEILPRIN Associated Press
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Comments  (5)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:05 AM, 01/26/2013
    This is the most shameless piece of pro governmnet garbage I have seen in a long time even from Heilprin. Rebuild the job market???? There are few jobs out there to "sell" in the market and millions of people with no skills. Like it or not, you can not teach in a class the basics of a job. You have to be in a job. So what does the developed world do? Pile on the companies that tradditionally offer the first or second jobs. Government has made it too expensive for business to take the raw worker and teach them to work. It is cheaper to automate. That is the lesson that obama's faithful minions have no clue about and that is why their chances of ever being more than Democrat robots voting for big government are all but gone. Historical fact: Under Reagan the minority community business ownership exploded out from a tiny sliver to a significant factor. The chance to own the business created more middle class african americans than all the governement quotas. 2.3 MILLION americans work for McDonalds and the like today and fully 60% of young americans get their first jobs there. In ten years the number will be less than 1.2 million due to the new robots coming ot the market that can make burgers etc. 80% of the jobs left will be perminant long term dead end positions with little hope of better. Why? Because government programs such as Obamacare will increase the cost of each employee 150% in the next ten years in real inflation adjusted dollars. Big Mac are already going for $8 in NYC. Do you think people will even stop in if they increase to $15 or more? Who looses? 1 million of the jobs lost will hit the black and hispanic communities.

    The very fact that AP and the INKY print this tripe show how totally disconnected we are from reality. Western PA was laughed at for keeping vo-tech. Now thier kids are walking into $60k jobs in the gas business. Government is the problem
    Dutch-wayne
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:25 AM, 01/26/2013
    The government needs to do less, not more. There are so many roadblocks to moving in and out of jobs because the government, in its quest to protect us, put in so many rules just to enter many industries. You need a college education, then you need thousands of dollars and hours to get licensed, and that's just to get your foot in the door. Plus there are too many government agendas like now with Obamacare. Yeah let's train everyone to be doctors and nurses and administrators whether they want to be or not. Then in 10 years when the system crashes, they'll be millions of medical professionals who will need retraining. How about we just let the free market decide what careers are hot and people will gravitate towards them.
    Phillies2008WSChamps
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:52 PM, 01/26/2013
    Abolish NAFTA and GATT
    DaHurricane
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:19 PM, 01/26/2013
    Only a thriving free market can drive economic activity long term. Government is not the answer (that is stone cold ridiculous). Government is the problem.
    kelprod2-freemarket
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:13 PM, 01/27/2013
    What's the sense in "training" is the jobs aren't out there? We need a president who cares more about getting the economy back on track, especially small businesses. Obamacare is killing the upstarts. This "Great Leader" would rather inflate his ego at the cost of watching a once great nation become a 3rd world banana republic.
    dogman5