By Peter Creticos
Institute for Work and the Economy
Every period of fundamental change in world markets and technology is marked by profound challenges and great opportunities. The Great Depression was the beginning point for one such period, but unlike prior times when markets were left to sort things out, the federal government finally stepped forward in an effort to correct failures and to expedite the transition from one economic order to another. Since then, public institutions at all levels have intervened in the labor market with regulations, training and education, subsidies, employment insurance, and information resources.
Another fundamental change is occurring in the global economic order – a change that began a few years ago and is punctuated by the current crisis. It is characterized by near instantaneous communication of enormous volumes of unfiltered information, rapid differentiation, diffusion and expansion in producer and consumer markets, and significant compression in the cycle of invention to obsolescence.
Two challenges arise as we face this new reality: First, we must be sure that the legacy institutions and labor market policies developed over prior periods are still useful in an emerging environment that favors knowledge, agility and remarkable foresight. We must ask whether the information systems supporting the exchange of labor are adequate to the task. We must determine whether workers and businesses are afforded the resources – both financial and substantive – to follow through on their decisions. We must also know whether training and educational providers are able to meet new demands in terms of who they serve, the timeliness of their services, and the content of what they provide.
The second test is to design the next generation of policies and programs. The twin goals are to create a competitive advantage for American businesses and to improve the opportunity for a better quality of life for American workers. The primary focus should be on actions that improve the fairness, efficiency, efficacy, and transparency of labor markets. All participants in the market – business, workers, educational and training providers, and intermediaries – should have access to timely, accurate and comprehensive information and interpretative tools on changing labor and economic market conditions. All who want to work must have the same opportunities to do so safely and earn no less than a living wage. Employers must know that the value of the work that they receive is commensurate with what they are paying. The market itself must do a good job of matching supply with demand and be sufficiently flexible to respond to unexpected shifts due to innovation and sudden changes in market conditions.
There are five elements to a fair, market based workforce system. First, the workforce system is in the business of developing human talent and seeing to its highest and best use. As such, it should closely match the intersecting interests of employers and workers. Given the rapid pace of economic and technological change, this will be achieved through some combination of strategies addressing industry needs, individual aspirations and a drive to innovate. There will not be an endpoint to learning. A map of each worker’s qualities over time will probably resemble a growing interconnected web of validated skills and formal credentials. As a result, the education and training system must be sufficiently robust and agile to accommodate a growing population of adult learners pursuing highly individualized interests. It will need to do a very good job of recognizing and validating skills that are acquired on the job or at overseas institutions. And, policies and programs will need to recognize that workers who are older than 50 require different training solutions and face different career choices than their younger colleagues.
In the course of developing and promoting human talent, it also is essential to look beyond known business needs and consider how that talent may be encouraged to invent, innovate and start new businesses. Instead of looking at the body of skills of each worker and trying to only match it to demand, the workforce system should also be asked to offer a means for those with unique talent to express it in creative and, hopefully, economically productive ways. This is a very different role for the workforce system that will challenge policymakers to create appropriate new policies and resources.
Second, the resources allocated to the workforce system need to reflect the economic stakes for the U.S. as a whole. It is doubtful that the current model of private investment and relatively small public support is sufficient to sustain and grow the U.S. economy in the face of determined, growing global competition. As it stands now, once a person finishes high school, the shape and quality of the U.S. labor supply is determined largely by two groups: individuals making personal investments in their education and training and businesses that train their workers to meet specific needs.
It is time to match the level of public investment with the importance of the challenge. A bold step is to extend free-public education to include the first two years of post-secondary education or the equivalent in occupation training. The federal governments and the states should also expand the size of direct public investment in training and education, support a discipline of lifelong learning through either subsidies or tax-supported saving plans, and encourage employers and unions to integrate training in every aspect of the workplace through tax policies or matching subsidies. Moreover, the labor market needs to be accepted as an equal of financial and capital markets. Each drives economic growth, and is affected by it.
Third, decision-makers – employers, job seekers, workers, training and education providers, and labor market intermediaries – must have the capacity and resources to monitor and manage risk and to make wise investments. Today’s labor market information system was designed to inform policymakers about current and past conditions and to make broad projections of the future. While many important improvements continue to be made, it is worthwhile to ask whether the current system is adequate in an environment that requires workers and employers to act quickly and creatively in the face of rapid economic changes. A fair assessment likely will show that new forms of information and even new information structures are needed to support education and training investment decisions by workers and employers and the service investments by those who support the labor exchange. What cannot happen is that we simply assume that the existing system is adequate to the task.
Fourth, seemingly intractable inequities continue to create barriers for millions of workers. When they do, the public workforce system needs to be accepted as the place for those who have nowhere else to go. The highest priority should be given to those who are the hardest to employ, including those who face significant barriers as a result of economic disadvantage, gender, racial, and ethnic discrimination, physical, mental and cognitive disabilities, criminal records, illiteracy, or low basic skills. What distinguishes the workforce system from other services is that results are measured in terms of skills, competencies and work outcomes. While training innovations and new experience-based approaches have held down costs and improved outcomes especially for low skilled workers, programs that help those with the greatest need sometimes appear to be the most costly. Considering the alternative – returning people to prison, placing people in long-term care or providing shelter and food to those who cannot afford to do so – the cost of an inclusive workforce system is a bargain. The public policy challenge is to recognize that important social and economic benefits are achieved by lifting the floor.
Finally, a very real danger of the current economic crisis is that it will undermine the standing of millions of Americans. The potential human costs make it simply unacceptable to rely on conventional policies to ride out the downturn. History shows that it will take years into an economic recovery before many recover personally. In fact, real median income measured against the highpoint prior to the current downturn is still below pre-2001 recession levels.
Circumstances require that the federal government consider a combination of public employment, subsidized private employment and publicly supported training wrapped with income stipends. This initiative will help families weather the economic crisis. It will provide for the country’s economic future by tying public work-related investments to infrastructure improvement or to critical economic sectors such as manufacturing, transportation, warehousing and distribution, healthcare, communications and security. And, it will use these subsidies to prepare workers for later in their careers by insisting that every learned skilled or competency is validated and documented.
In her essay on American citizenship , Judith Shklar observed that “citizens in a democracy are entitled to respect” which is tied inextricably to the ability “to earn a living wage for all who need and demand it.” She wrote that “[i]n a polity of interest and rights-claiming individuals, only those who act in their own behalf and are recognized as competent in civil and political society can count as full citizens.” It follows that people feel diminished as members of society when they are out of work for long periods – or when they are never gainfully employed. Put in these terms, there are few issues more important to our democracy than whether a person is able to earn a living wage.
The new workforce development system must be comprehensive and inclusive. It must address the challenges of today’s economy and respond effectively to tomorrow’s uncertainties. And, it must advance civil society by respecting individual needs, by responding to the needs of employers, by supporting economic growth and innovation, and by improving the quality of life for workers.
(1) Judith N. Shklar, American Citizenship: The Quest for Inclusion. Harvard University Press. 1991
Note: This is a revision of the original post of November 2008 and responds to some of the comments below. The opinions expressed here are solely those of the author of the original post and of the commentators, and do not necessarily reflect those of the Institute for Work and the Economy, its staff, officers or board of directors.
This is a moderated blog. The purpose of the blog is to promote discussion and an exchange of views on workforce policy and principles. Anonymous comments will not be posted, although pseudonyms are permitted. Comments aren't posted immediately. They're screened for relevance to the topic, obscenity, spam and personal attacks. We can't always get them up as soon as we'd like so please be patient.
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
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3 comments:
Thank you for sending this. I for one need to be encouraged more often to step back and see where we are. Several thoughts:
The centrality of work to a dignified life is true, but we have come to a foolish societal agreement that it is primarily up to the individual to make a success of his/her working life and that society has a limited role. From our current vantage point in the midst of the Panic of 2008, that seems like a bad idea. People are buffeted by economic forces that society did not temper and now cannot control. Workforce policy needs to help people survive these forces and set up stronger systems to reduce the risk for people in the long term.
I take issue with your statement that “First, decision‐makers – employers, job seekers, workers, training and education providers, and labor market intermediaries – must have the capacity to constantly monitor and manage risk and to consistently make wise investments.” Job seekers and workers are uniquely unsuited to managing risk, however much information we make available, yet we have piled more risk on them. Our job should be to reduce the risk that people face, not help them manage forces they cannot control
We have told people to do impossible things like “take charge of your own career” and “your own brand.” Figure out your own career path and go out and get the training you think you need. Navigate the admissions and scheduling systems of a bureaucracy to get training. Raise the capital to pay for training, mostly through loans.
Our policy prescriptions have been hemmed in by the same economic orthodoxy that celebrates the stock market, CDOs, credit default swaps, and other alchemy. We are told government can help only if we can show “market failure.” Of course the markets have now failed in such spectacular fashion that Bush has nationalized the financial sector. The markets failed for a lot of people a long time ago: People who got training but not a job; people who got laid off to improve quarterly profits; people who worked hard to improve productivity and were rewarded not with higher pay but with a layoff; people with and without health insurance whose income is falling because they have to pay for more of their own healthcare costs; people who believed that the stock market was better than a pension.
Most of us can remember the good old days when jobs were secure (at least in autos, banks, the telephone company, airlines, utilities, and government) and pensions, healthcare, and career advancement were not the responsibility of individuals, struggling against massive economic forces, but where the responsibility of employers.
We don’t have the expertise as individuals to accept the labor market risk that is being heaped upon us--any more than we have the expertise to invest our own pensions in the stock market.
My own experience has been with public financing of job training so I will take that as an example of where we can go. Public and private schools have powerful financial interests in recruiting job seekers and workers for training that may or may not lead to decent jobs or career advancement. No amount of information is going to equalize the positions of students who want jobs and income and schools who want students. Schools, whose full time job is recruiting students, will always have better information, and nicer brochures than prospective students. In our system today, the student assumes all the risk of finding the right school and then finding a job after school is over. The school gets paid whether or not the student gets a job. As you know, I have advocated shifting most of that risk to the school, by requiring employment as well as training before the school gets paid.
Yes, we need to invest much more in our workforce systems, but at the same time we need to demand more from those systems. We need to be sure that everything we do improves the economic position of workers, job seekers and employers.
Here are excerpts of responses received by e-mail. Since the authors have not given me permission to use their names, I do not show their names:
One commentator noted:
To achieve the principles you laid out is much broader and more challenging than the reauthorization of any piece of federal legislation. The first step of rethinking our labor market information systems to inform the complexity of decision that need to be made by individuals, employers, educators and policy makers is critical, yet daunting if it is done right. No less daunting is the task of ensuring there is no “end point to learning” by turning our education and training systems into the “robust and agile” systems they need to be to accommodate the needs of the broad spectrum of current and future workers and employers. Where do we start?
I tend to disagree with your third point that “the public workforce system needs to be accepted as the last resort for those who have no other place to go;” that is if it means relegating them to a second-chance system and marginalizing their opportunity. I think the public workforce system should invest in individuals based on need and use this investment to incent mainstream systems to educate and train the most in need while also addressing their support needs.
After reading the remainder of the essay, I was left questioning whether the public workforce system as currently structured was up to delivering on your proposed federal interventions. Given the crisis we’re in, do we have time to fixing it before asking them to do more? Could it handle even a fraction of the investment that is being made to hold the financial systems together?
Another commentator said:
I like this approach and find it more likely to garner support for the ideas you put forth.
I would recommend the following changes to page two paragraph 3;
Drop THE reference to the wf system as a LAST RESORT. SUBSTITUTE LANGUAGE SIMILAR TO THE FOLLOWING:
1) The WF system must be embrace a threefold mission and establish itself as:
2) The most effective vehicle for success of those who have no where else to turn.
3) The gateway for new entrants into the labor market system.
4) The premier arbiter of the efforts to assist workers in transition at all levels.
Finally, another person responded with this:
Another way to think about the public workforce system is as the taxpayers’ investment in a sustainable structure to adjust for mismatches in labor supply and demand brought about by our inability to keep up with economic, social, technological, and other changes. From this viewpoint, the current economic crisis presents an incredible opportunity for us to re-align the taxpayers’ (public) system to better address the needs of displaced workers and firms who need to manage their talent more efficiently and effectively.
We have been running a network for laid-off IT professionals (everyone from Help Desk 1 positions to Computer Systems Analysts) for five months now and we have learned so much about the failures of our current system in meeting the needs of these individuals. Here is a comment from a computer programmer in a survey we just conducted of participants in our Bounce Back Network for Tech Talent in Transition.
“I have been either active or inactive in the Career Center WIA program since 2003. During this time I have made very little progress. In fact, I was counseled to give up on finding employment in IT—a pill I couldn’t swallow. I learned more about what is required for the type of job search I am conducting through the Bounce Back program. I have also been able to personally utilize [name of specific career counselor] who seems to have a better sense of how to pursue the type of work I am seeking. He has taken an active role in my job search….
In all of those years I spent with the WIA program, I can’t believe that no one told me about the careeronestop.org website. That no one told me that linkedIn was a professional networking site was more understandable. I was told that training dollars were available but didn’t know how they would best benefit me or where to utilize them. If Bounce Back continues and I am able to continue with the day shift [temp work], I plan on continuing with Bounce Back until this lack of employment threat has been severely weakened. “
We have a long way to go as stewards of the public’s system.
I'm somewhat embarrassed to say that I focused exclusively on the workforce system in the market of jobs and workers. I failed to say anything about the role of the workforce system in supporting innovation and entrepreneurship. There is a body of talent that exists in every community and neighborhood: the question is whether that talent can be the basis for new business development.
In a recent conversation with a friend who grew up as a farmer, I asked whether there has been much done to enlist the practical know-how of farmers and their children in the development and practical use of sustainable energy sources. I noted that the farm implement and automotive industries owed their beginning to the humble efforts of farmers and inventors who were simply trying to get better production from the land. While the technologies are vastly different today and the times are not the same, the point is that talent and need drove innovation. The businesses that employed the workers to build the machines came as a result of the ideas of those who were simply trying to solve problems.
This role for the workforce system requires a completely different set of tasks. Instead of looking at the body of talent of each worker and trying to only match it to demand, the workforce system will also be asked to offer the means for those who unique talent to express it in creative and, hopefully, economically productive ways.
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