there are 8.2 million job openings in America right now and around 7 million people actively looking for a job there are also millions of Americans who have simply given up on even trying to look for a job but still companies are complaining that they can't get the people they need there is one reason that has been used time and time again to explain all of this a range of companies are looking at how to close the skills Gap skills Gap just a skill Gap skills Gap skills Gap yep the skills Gap there are people looking
for work and jobs on offer but the skills of those people and the requirements of the jobs just don't line up it's a simple elegant explanation to a major problem but it's also almost entirely made up 20-year-old Jesus Vegas is in the second year of his training he's building a career in Advanced Construction technology today's incomes Gap is largely a skills Gap 87% of Americans said that they are going to need to get skills and new training throughout their work life it's really remarkable the skills Gap also known as a skill shortage or just good
old structural unemployment is a convenient excuse for a lot of major issues in today's job market that are often swept under the rug by businesses politicians and even economic statistics if a hospital is hiring a doctor but the only person in town looking for a job has a degree in computer science then obviously that role is not going to be filled regardless of how much time and effort the applicant has put into their education the argument that you would have seen is that the same problem is playing out everywhere across the world which is why
even if companies claim to be desperate to hire people you might struggle to find a job the whole argument conveniently shifts the blame of any labor market problems onto the workers because they are the ones that haven't trained the right skills or developed the right experience the first problem with this idea though is how the problem of the skills Gap quietly Slips Away during the good times research published by economists from Harvard Northern University and the Federal Reserve found a striking relationship between unemployment and the experience that employers look for in their candidates the team
collected data on over 36 million job postings over 3 years and what they found was that the skills and experience required was almost directly proportional to the unemployment rate in plain English what this meant was that when there were lots of people looking for a job all of a sudden the skills requirement for roles became a lot higher and this is when people will start complaining about a skills Gap but when unemployment is lower and there aren't that many people applying for jobs suddenly the skills Gap isn't such a big problem and companies are happy
to hire whoever they can get now as long as they aren't discriminating based on protected classes companies can basically hire whoever they want and ask for whatever skills they can if unemployment is high and they can be greedy with their job requirements that's just business but the problem is the myth of the skills Gap is used to justify a lot of bad stuff the first is simply lower wages if companies post a position with high skill requirements and they don't get any applicants that meet their unreasonably High bar they can go back to the best
applicant with a lower salary and benefit offer than advertised pointing out the gaps in their skills as a reason for the lower offer this is just basic salary negotiation tactics but the myth of the skills Gap makes it easier for companies to get away with this a report by MIT found that most jobs advertised in America ask for skills like programming that were actually not required to perform the job they look specifically at it help desk technicians that deal with computers so most companies ask for programming skills the thing is though most it help desk
techs don't actually use programming for anything but a lot of companies just assume that computers equal code and so make it a job requirement the report actually found that programming was just as useful in manufacturing plants as it was in it help desk work but Factory machine operators were far more likely to get on the job training on how to program their machines than IT workers who are just assumed to know how to code but lower wages are far from the worst thing that the myth of the skills Gap has been us to push for
it's also been an incredible tool for lobbying on migration policy education funding and workplace protections these are worth looking at one by one because you are probably going to start hearing a lot of familiar sound bites so it's time to learn how money Works to find out how the myth of the skills Gap helps everyone but you this week's video is sponsored by surf shark surf shark is a powerful VPN that keeps your online activity secure and private whether you're browsing at home or using public Wi-Fi surf shark ensures your personal information stays hidden from
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at Surf shark.com for/ money if there was actually a supply of good paying jobs available to people that were going unfilled because of the skills Gap then the traditional Market assumption would be that people would retrain to fill those rules to increase their income and job security but that isn't happening because there are problems with every part of this assumption the first problem is that a lot of the jobs we have a skills scap for here in America don't actually pay that well according to a report by the Society of resource management the hardest rules
to fill currently include jobs like nursing teaching the trades and Social Service work most jobs in these rules do not pay enough to support a comfortable life in a major city especially for entry-level employees into the roles the trades can be great but Apprentice Tradesmen are not going to earn much until they are fully qualified and even then they need to work significant overtime or own their own business to make a comfortable salary in most parts of the country even still they are going to be better off than teachers and nurses who not only need
a college degree where they won't be paid anything they also need on the job training before they are earning anything at all that's on top of reports about extreme job stress brutal work schedules and the general lack of respect these rules receive putting your career on hold spending tens of thousands of dollars on a college degree and dealing with difficult patients or often dangerous patients or children is not that enticing to Americans who would consider a career switch because the income for these rules hasn't risen in line with the Dem hand Gap there is not
a skill shortage there is just a shortage of people who want to do difficult jobs for bad pay people in these rules who already have the skills to perform the job at a high level are leaving because it's just not worth making the sacrifices necessary when there are easier jobs that PID just as much or more a counter example to this trend was the rush to train computer science the tech industry in the 2000s was expanding rapidly and we didn't have enough coders to perform roles that actually needed programming skills the Allure of high paying
respected jobs with a good work life balance meant a lot of very smart people moved into that career path to fill the skills Gap because there was a real reward for doing so now there are actually too many qualified programmers and as the tech industry has cooled down hundreds of thousands of people have been laid off just 5 years ago though they would have been told that there isn't enough programmers and companies are hiring whoever they can as fast as they can so the assumption that empty jobs are just waiting to be filled and the
only thing standing in the way is the skills Gap can be a bit dangerous but the final piece of the puzzle is how profitable fixing this myth can be politicians can win some easy political points by talking about retraining programs and companies can push the responsibility of Staff training onto their workers or those government programs the market research firm Allied market research values the corporate training Market at over $361 billion with it projected to grow to over 800 billion by 2035 that's a major industry just by itself and it relies heavily on people believe that
they are just one qualification away from Landing a job that is just desperate to find the right worker this industry is separate from traditional colleges and trade schools but you already know what a mess that whole thing is the skills Gap has been a major lobbying tool by companies to push for this kind of training siemens an industrial equipment manufacturer paid for an article in the Atlantic talking directly to policy makers that the apprenticeships were the secret to closing the skills Gap apprenticeships are actually great but the reason that siemens was paying to publish this
article is that it would give them a new pool of skilled workers to pick from not because they wanted to help out with labor force policies and this is where you get to the most controversial part of the skills Gap it's used to justify immigration now this is obviously a heated topic that everybody has their own set of opinions on but it is possible to advocate for more careful and deliberate immigration policies without going full they took our jobs the skills Gap has been used to push for a lot of skilled migration which has arguably
gone too far in America but has been even been more obvious in places like Canada the UK Australia Germany and New Zealand the reason companies like this is because it lets them fill roles without putting upward pressure on salaries and more people means more customers to sell products to if the skills Gap is front and center around these sensitive issues it makes it easier for policy to be handwaved through as an essential measure to keep the country functioning here in America H1B and eb3 skilled working visas are the most common way to get in workers
who fill skilled rules that can't be filled by an American they come with a strict set of rules to make sure that American workers are not disadvantaged by new foreign hires but if job requirements are kept unreasonably High to make an artificial skills Gap it becomes easier to hire workers from overseas who will be dependent on that company sponsorship to stay in America who do you think is more likely to be a loyal employee now there are people who disagree with this a smaller Channel called the market exit did a great video a few months
ago on a politically incorrect view of migration specifically in Europe I don't always agree with everything he says but I think it's essential to hear our conflicting arguments at the very least his videos deserve way more attention than what they are getting so instead of shamelessly plugging myself I recommend that you go and check out his video I will shamelessly plug my newsletter though this week we are publishing an article on the people who can't afford to retire but they are doing it anyways so make sure to sign up to that so you can keep
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