The limits of more education
By Jared Bernstein
April 2, 2004
Opinion pieces and speeches by EPI staff and
associates.
[ THIS PIECE ORIGINALLY APPEARED IN ARIZONA DAILY STAR ON APRIL 1, 2004 ]
The limits of more education
by
Jared Bernstein and
Amy Chasanov
Whether it's offshoring or downsizing, productivity growth or
jobless recoveries, everybody's favorite solution is more
education.
No less than Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said in recent
testimony that the United States has "a shortage of highly skilled
workers and a surplus of lesser-skilled workers."
What you won't find, however, is a great deal of evidence to
support the claim.
What's been happening to college-educated workers proves the point.
A college diploma, and the high level skills it signifies, should
be a sure-fire ticket for getting and keeping a good job. But the
ranks of unemployed college-educated workers are large and growing
- in 2003 they made up 19 percent of those who were out of work for
six months or longer.
Job market stagnation has eaten away at the wages of recent
college-educated workers, too. Between 1996 and 2001, the real
wages of recent college grads were on the rise, but since 2001
they've fallen slightly.
Net job losses, falling employment, rising unemployment rates and
declining wages all reveal a labor market grown increasingly
inhospitable to college- educated job seekers.
The problem is the lack of job creation in the occupations and
industries that tend to employ them.
Don't get us wrong: Highly educated workers are far more likely to
be employed and to be better compensated than those with less
education.
The question is, will future demand keep up with rising graduation
rates?
Here's where the accelerated practice of offshoring creates a new
and prodigious challenge. Technological advances in computing and
telecommunications combine with a huge pool of relatively highly
skilled workers in other countries to put educated U.S. workers in
direct competition with foreign workers who can do the work for
much lower wages.
It is not at all clear that there's a shortage of highly skilled
U.S. workers. And educating and retraining these workers won't
stimulate higher demand here for college-educated workers.
High-skill jobs are reportedly already moving overseas. Among them
are jobs for computer programmers, software engineers, architects,
radiologists and financial analysts.
These workers are among the most highly educated in our country, if
not the world. Raising their skills even further is worthwhile but
not a panacea for their problems.
While investments in education are critical to our economic future,
they are not sufficient. If we are to have good jobs for our
educated work force we must control the loss of jobs to imports and
do more to create jobs here at home, in export industries, in the
public sector and in private research and development.
Jared Bernstein is senior economist
and
Amy Chasanov is deputy director of policy at the
Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C.
[ POSTED TO VIEWPOINTS ON APRIL 2, 2004 ]
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