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      <td width="92%"><b><font color="#BB0000">ADULT 
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                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Got 
                  Skills?<br>
                  </b></font><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">U.S. 
                  workers are not prepared for the jobs of the future.<br>
                  </font></b><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">by 
                  Carol D'Amico</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Keeping 
                  older workers in the workforce is not the whole solution to 
                  the challenge of having enough workers during the next century. 
                  As Alan Reynolds notes elsewhere in this issue, businesses and 
                  policymakers can help alleviate the forthcoming worker dearth 
                  by encouraging older people to remain in the workforce rather 
                  than retiring early. But that alone will not suffice. We need 
                  to have enough of the right kinds of worker. Therein lies a 
                  whole host of other challenges. We will not only experience 
                  a quantity shortage of workers early in the next century but 
                  a quality shortage as well. Evidence suggests that we very likely 
                  will have a mismatch between workers&#8217; skills and the skill 
                  requirements of the available jobs.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">When 
                  the Baby Boomers become eligible to end their careers at the 
                  traditional retirement age of sixty-five, around 2010, we will 
                  see a shift in the types of job available. For the first time, 
                  the number of higher-skilled jobs will outnumber low-skilled 
                  ones. The Bureau of Labor Statistics has quantified the ever-increasing 
                  reading, mathematics, and reasoning skills that will be required 
                  to take advantage of the jobs that will be growing in the economy 
                  during the next ten to fifteen years. So when the Baby Boomers 
                  start to leave the workforce in droves, more will be expected 
                  of those workers who enter and remain in the labor force. In 
                  a country full of workers who are unemployable or capable of 
                  working only on the lower rungs of the skill and wage ladder, 
                  economic growth will slow to a crawl.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">The 
                  process has already begun. Last fall, the Boeing Company&#8217;s 
                  inability to find qualified workers caused a growing late-order 
                  backlog that was at least partially responsible for the Seattle 
                  jet manufacturer&#8217;s operating loss of $696 million. Across 
                  the country, hundreds of firms of varying sizes have been forced 
                  to turn down work worth millions of dollars.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Today 
                  an estimated 200,000-400,000 high-technology-related jobs are 
                  vacant in the U.S. The U.S. Department of Labor estimates that 
                  during the next ten years 1.3 million new high-tech jobs will 
                  become available and we are preparing only a fraction of the 
                  workers needed to fill those jobs. Unless we make major changes 
                  in our education and job training system, American workers will 
                  not be able to take them.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">The 
                  high-paying jobs of the future will be financially rewarding, 
                  intellectually stimulating, and physically undemanding, but 
                  only those with the appropriate skills will be able to take 
                  advantage of them. These jobs will not go unfilled. Globally, 
                  there is a vast supply of skilled labor. Already American companies 
                  are turning to workers in India, Europe, and South America to 
                  fill high-tech jobs because they cannot find qualified American 
                  workers. The challenge is to prepare American workers to compete 
                  for these positions. The single most important goal for this 
                  country ought to be improving the quality of our education system 
                  substantially&#8212;at all levels.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Pitifully 
                  Unprepared</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">According 
                  to a recent survey commissioned by the National Association 
                  of Manufacturers, more than six of every ten U.S. companies 
                  believe that their current workforce has serious deficiencies 
                  in basic job attitudes (such as timeliness, absenteeism, and 
                  staying at work all day). More than half find that their workers 
                  have serious shortcomings in basic math, written language, and 
                  reading comprehension skills. Almost half the companies surveyed 
                  believe that their current workforce lacks the ability to read 
                  and translate drawings, diagrams, and flow charts.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Companies 
                  are spending more to educate and train workers. A recent survey 
                  conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics found that nearly 
                  93 percent of establishments with fifty or more employees provide 
                  or finance formal training for their workforce. Nearly 70 percent 
                  of employees in these establishments have received some formal 
                  on-the-job training. These companies spent $7.7 billion on in-house 
                  trainers and another $5.5 billion on outside trainers. Several 
                  surveys suggest that approximately one-third of all such training 
                  is in basic skills such as reading, writing, and mathematics 
                  and that most recipients are high-school graduates.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">It 
                  appears that employers will need to upgrade skills of existing 
                  workers for the foreseeable future. A 1992 U.S. Department of 
                  Education study of adult literacy in the U.S. found that approximately 
                  40 percent of U.S. adults are functionally illiterate in reading, 
                  mathematics, and the ability to understand simple documents 
                  such as maps and train schedules. And 14 to 16 percent of American-born 
                  college graduates tested were functionally illiterate.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">The 
                  literacy study does provide one perverse ray of hope: the cohort 
                  of people over fifty-five years old is much less literate than 
                  the younger adult population. Therefore, as the older workers 
                  leave the workforce the average literacy level should rise slightly. 
                  Unfortunately, the forthcoming replacement workers&#8212;those 
                  between the ages of eighteen and twenty-four&#8212;will be insufficiently 
                  prepared for the high-tech jobs to come, especially compared 
                  with their international competitors.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">According 
                  to the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), only 
                  about one-fourth of U.S. twelfth-graders can perform math and 
                  reading proficiently and one-third of the total are below basic 
                  levels of proficiency. Thus millions of young people leave high 
                  school each year without the knowledge and skills they need 
                  to succeed in the workforce. Many of those who go on to college 
                  will be unprepared to benefit from higher education: approximately 
                  30 percent of entering freshmen need remedial courses in reading, 
                  writing, and mathematics. (See &quot;The College Payoff Illusion,&quot; 
                  by Edwin Rubenstein, in this issue.)</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">In 
                  core academic subjects, U.S. high school graduates fare poorly 
                  compared with their peers across the globe. Recently, American 
                  twelfth-graders scored near the bottom on the Third International 
                  Mathematics and Science Study, and U.S. students placed nineteenth 
                  out of twenty-one nations in math and sixteenth out of twenty-one 
                  in science. Our advanced students fared even worse, scoring 
                  dead last in physics. The evidence suggests that, compared to 
                  the rest of the industrialized world, our students lag seriously 
                  in critical areas vital to our economic future.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Good 
                  education will be indispensable for economic success. The United 
                  States will not remain competitive with the rest of the world 
                  if large numbers of our employees are unable to perform the 
                  work required of them.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Improving 
                  Education</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">K-12 
                  Education. Improving our elementary and secondary education 
                  system is the most cost-effective way to increase the number 
                  of skilled workers in the workforce. Increasing the number of 
                  high-school graduates with appropriate reading, writing, mathematics, 
                  reasoning, and computer skills would go a long way toward filling 
                  the available jobs and laying a suitable foundation on which 
                  workers could upgrade their skills once in the workforce.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">During 
                  the past fifteen years, the U.S. has tried every conceivable 
                  &quot;reform&quot; to improve our education system. We have 
                  spent millions of dollars tinkering with it by adding more school 
                  days, testing students, testing teachers, building new facilities, 
                  buying computers, and trying hundreds of faddish programs. The 
                  test scores alluded to earlier show the dismal results. Rather 
                  than trying to reform the system, we need to redefine it entirely, 
                  by injecting competition and incentives to achieve&#8212;not 
                  just for students but, perhaps more importantly, for teachers 
                  and administrators as well.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">With 
                  this in mind, more than thirty states around the country have 
                  instituted charter schools. These are new forms of public school 
                  run by teachers, parents, community organizations, and private 
                  companies. They adopt various approaches to education, and parents 
                  elect to enroll their children in these schools insofar as the 
                  schools appear likely to meet their children&#8217;s needs. 
                  Charter schools cost no more than regular public schools (and 
                  often less), and are far less bureaucratized and burdened by 
                  regulations. They are held accountable for their performance 
                  by the public body that chartered them&#8212;in most cases a 
                  local or state school board. Evaluations by Hudson Institute 
                  and other organizations suggest that charter schools can improve 
                  the basic education of America&#8217;s youth while placing healthy 
                  competitive pressure on regular public schools.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Other 
                  attempts at injecting competition into primary and secondary 
                  education have not spread as quickly. Milwaukee and Cleveland 
                  are using vouchers, in which tax dollars appropriated for education 
                  go directly to low-income parents instead of schools. Parents 
                  choose the schools that best fit their children&#8217;s needs, 
                  whether public or private, just like their wealthier counterparts. 
                  Several cities have privately funded voucher programs that work 
                  similarly. Preliminary evidence from these programs suggests 
                  that they increase achievement of participating students, particularly 
                  compared to their peers who do not participate.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Post-Secondary 
                  Education. The U.S. may well have the best system of higher 
                  education in the world, but it is showing distinct signs of 
                  decline. As we noted in our 1997 Hudson Institute study Workforce 
                  2020, &quot;higher education has lowered its standards and the 
                  rigors of its curriculum to accommodate the large numbers of 
                  people enrolling. It is a common refrain from employers that 
                  a college degree does not mean what it used to. . . . Graduates 
                  may be . . . surprised to find themselves unqualified to fill 
                  available high-skill jobs in the future.&quot;</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">The 
                  U.S. has a serious mismatch between higher education and economic 
                  needs. A Hudson Institute study by Chester E. Finn Jr. found 
                  that more college degrees were granted in home economics than 
                  in mathematics, and more in &quot;protective services&quot; 
                  than in all the physical sciences combined. Yet a large share 
                  of the unfilled jobs today and those that are growing in the 
                  economy are in the technical fields, and we are not preparing 
                  enough people in these areas. We need to encourage postsecondary 
                  institutions to be more flexible and to respond to labor market 
                  demands.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">There 
                  is a common perception in this country that we need to deal 
                  with. Americans are infatuated with the college degree and believe 
                  it to be a ticket to the middle class. Yet, as Edwin Rubenstein 
                  notes, not all college grads experience equal financial gains. 
                  For instance, degree holders in the social sciences earn less 
                  than those who earned their degrees in the physical sciences 
                  and technical fields. Furthermore, a large share of the fastest-growing 
                  occupations in the years to come will require education beyond 
                  high school but not necessarily a four-year college degree. 
                  Colleges and students should make a conscious effort to ensure 
                  that a student&#8217;s huge investment in a college education 
                  pays off in useful skills and knowledge.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Adult 
                  Education. The most obvious way to increase the pool of skilled 
                  workers is to encourage every person eligible for the labor 
                  force to be in the labor force and to help workers upgrade their 
                  skills to take advantage of available jobs. Most communities 
                  have no real strategy for helping adults cope with the realities 
                  of the new economy. Most urgently needed is an information system 
                  that informs adults about economic trends and job availability. 
                  Many adults also need help in analyzing their own strengths 
                  and figuring out how to enhance their skills to compete for 
                  available jobs. Also, although most communities have a myriad 
                  of educational programs available through colleges and universities, 
                  all too few of these are well-organized and made convenient 
                  for working adults.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Decentralization, 
                  Incentives</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Training 
                  people for the workforce and matching jobs and workers are largely 
                  local matters that call for decentralized approaches. Individuals 
                  armed with timely information about employment opportunities 
                  can figure out for themselves which skills are most likely to 
                  advance their careers. The problem today is that most people 
                  lack access to good information about labor markets or quality 
                  education programs that suit their interests and abilities. 
                  Labor market information programs operated by state governments 
                  and funded through employer taxes are not designed to provide 
                  this type of consumer information. In most communities, no one 
                  entity is responsible for providing labor market or career development 
                  information to adults preparing for or already in the workforce. 
                  And most high-school and college career counseling programs 
                  are woefully inadequate.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Federal 
                  job training programs&#8212;which now cost approximately $25 
                  billion per year&#8212;do not help most workers. These programs 
                  are designed largely for adults who are entering the workforce 
                  for the first time, have spotty work histories, or lack the 
                  basic skills required for entry level jobs. The programs are 
                  highly regulated by federal and state governments, and notoriously 
                  ineffective.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Employers 
                  have been much more successful at job training, spending millions 
                  of dollars upgrading the skills of their workers through creation 
                  of firm-specific training programs, partnerships with competitors, 
                  and contracting with community and technical colleges to provide 
                  appropriate classes. Government and community resources can 
                  support these types of program rather than prop up ones that 
                  have long outlived their usefulness.</font></b></p>
                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Unless 
                  we build the skilled workforce we need, it will become increasingly 
                  difficult for manufacturing and technology-driven companies 
                  to meet production goals in the U.S. If that happens, more jobs 
                  will move to companies&#8212;and countries&#8212;where workers 
                  have the necessary skills. Workers, firms, and countries that 
                  have the foresight to deal with this problem will have a distinct 
                  advantage in the years to come.<br>
                  <br>
                  <br>
                  <a href="http://www.americanoutlook.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=article_detail&id=2164" target="http://www.americanoutlook.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=article_detail&amp;id=2164">http://www.americanoutlook.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=article_detail&amp;id=2164                  </a></font></b> </p>
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