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Lester Thurow on Skills and Careers

vivian Hutchinson
Mon, 18 Oct 1999 17:48:49 -0700


from 
T H E   J O B S   L E T T E R   1 0 9
a subscriber-based letter 
published in New Zealand 11 October 1999   
 -------------------------------------   

LESTER THUROW ON SKILLS AND CAREERS
LESTER THUROW argues that the biggest unknown for the 
individual within the "knowledge-based" economy is how to have a 
career in a system where there are no careers. 

In his new book "Building Wealth", Thurow describes how the 
new economy is dismantling the old foundations of personal, 
business and national success. For the individual, this has meant 
that the old career ladders are disappearing. And just what they are 
being replaced by ... is still very unclear. 

The individual hears the constant words of advice on what 
they will need for the "information age": skills, skills, skills. But, to 
Thurow, if our nations do not also re-organise themselves amidst 
this new economic landscape ... then people will be unable to make 
rational choices on what skills to invest in. 

In this special feature, The Jobs Letter presents Thurow's views 
on how skills and careers are faring in the new "knowledge" 
economy.

ON EDUCATION AS AN INVESTMENT
*     Education has always been a high-risk investment for the 
individual. More than 20 percent of all college graduates will end 
up making less than the average high school graduate. They 
invested and it did not pay off. But recently it has become even 
riskier. How does one plan the investments necessary to have a 
career in the face of corporate downsizings at profitable firms? 

*     For my generation of high school graduates, the concept of a 
career had meaning. During the 1950s in Montana, where I went to 
high school, many high school graduates started as laborers in the 
copper mines. Starting wages were good, and one could count on 
annual raises of two or three percent. There was a skill ladder. 
Laborers moved up to operating underground trains or other kinds 
of heavy equipment, learning the necessary skills by working as 
assistants to the operators. Someone who demonstrated 
intelligence and judgment could be given responsibility for setting 
off underground explosions. Each promotion meant higher hourly 
wages.  

When a worker reached his mid-thirties, he could expect to 
take the last step on the earnings ladder and become a contract 
miner, who was paid for each foot of tunnel dug rather than by the 
hour. He was no longer a wage slave. On this career ladder high 
school graduates could match college graduates in earnings. 

But that's all gone now. Those mines were shut down. The 
thousands of people who worked there were laid off. 

*     What used to be true only in declining industries -- that 
skills suddenly become valueless -- is now true everywhere. 
Downsizing is a way of life even in good times. In a global 
economy, if skills are cheaper somewhere else in the world, 
companies will move there to lower production costs. They aren't 
tied to any particular set of workers. When new knowledge makes 
old skills obsolete, firms want to employ workers who already have 
that knowledge. 

*     Something is happening in the 1990s that has never 
happened before, and its part of this knowledge economy. In the 
past, if a company was going broke, it always laid people off -- 
that's the American way. But we didn't have people laid off and 
downsized in profitable companies until the 1990s. Today, about 
800,000 Americans a year lose their jobs despite the fact that their 
companies are profitable and they personally are doing good jobs.

Now that's a brand new world, and it makes it very tough to 
have a career, because what happens to you when you are laid off 
at 35, 45 or 55? How do you get back onto some reasonable career 
ladder?

*     Explicitly or implicitly, today's high school graduate is 
given a message: "You are unlikely to have a lifetime career in any 
one company. You are going to have to learn to take responsibility 
for and manage your own career. Regular annual wage increases 
are a thing of the past. Paternalism is gone." If they are honest, 
employers themselves deliver the message. But how does anyone 
follow this advice? 

ON CAREER LADDERS
*     If career ladders don't exist within any one company, 
maybe they exist across different companies. This would mean that 
a good initial performance at Company A would lead to training 
opportunities, a better job, and higher wages at Company B. But the 
world doesn't work that way for most employees. 

Companies don't tell other companies who their good 
employees are -- even if they have no promotion opportunities to 
offer those employees. They don't want to lose them. Similarly, they 
don't tell other companies about their bad employees. They don't 
want to open themselves up to lawsuits. If asked, and they seldom 
are, companies are willing to tell other companies just one thing 
about a worker seeking a new job: Yes, that person did work for us. 

In this context a good performance at Company A doesn't 
matter, because it does not lead to opportunities for training and 
promotion at Company B. When workers move from one company 
to another, they simply start over at another entry-level job; there is 
no progress up a career ladder. The rational strategy is to keep 
moving until one finds a company that still has internal career 
ladders. But as such companies become fewer, the number of high 
school graduates with real career opportunities ahead of them 
declines to the vanishing point. 

*     A cross-company career ladder runs into other problems. 
After age forty-five cross-company career moves are difficult, and 
after age fifty-five they are impossible. (Those tracking downsized 
workers find that after age fifty-five they seldom find good jobs 
with good companies.) 

Age-discrimination laws can protect older employees against being 
unfairly dismissed from their old firms, but they cannot get them a 
good job at a new company. Employers have the right to hire the 
best workers available. In a fast-changing world older employees 
too often bring obsolete experience and out-of-date skills. There 
are always a lot of young potential employees who look more 
promising.  

ON FALLING EARNINGS 
*     The issue is not jobs. It is high wages and careers. If wages fall 
to be commensurate with skills, jobs are always available. That is 
what the American experience proves. Jobs have never been more 
plentiful than they are in the 1990s, yet wages have been falling for 
more than half of the work force. In contrast with jobs, careers are in 
very short supply in America.  

With career ladders in place, the ambitious worker of the 1950s 
or the 1960s could figure out what skills were needed for 
advancement. He or she knew what to take in night school. But 
without career ladders, how does anyone rationally plan an 
educational investment? What skills will pay off? No one wants to 
waste investment funds on skills that will go unused. 

*     The lack of career opportunities is dramatically visible in 
earnings data. The gains in real annual earnings of high school 
graduates aged twenty to forty are much smaller than they used to 
be. There are lots of jobs, and unemployment is low, but 
opportunities to acquire skills and the higher wages that go with 
them don't exist. As a result, earnings profiles are flatter. The lack of 
on-the-job opportunities to acquire new skills is another reason that 
the wage gap between high school graduates and college 
graduates has gotten much bigger in recent years. 

Real wages have also been falling for most of the labour force. At 
the same time, wage gains for those in the top 20 percent of the 
work force have never been larger. The widening disparity in 
earnings and wealth doesn't create problems for the economy (it 
simply produces more luxury goods and fewer middle-class 
goods), but it probably does create long-run political problems in a 
democracy. How does one preach political equality in an economy 
of ever-growing inequality?  

ON TRAINING ON-THE-JOB
*     Historically, on-the-job training has been central to skills 
acquisition for much of the population. But with downsizing, the 
days of extensive on-the-job training have ended. 

What replaces it? In economics textbooks workers start to pay 
employers for the training they used to get free, when they were 
expected to be lifetime employees, by working for wages below 
what they could get from an employer who was not providing 
training. This has not happened. Judging what skills to buy from 
one's employer is no simpler than judging what skills to buy from 
an outside institution. 

*     Paradoxically, just when one would think that firms would 
be building closer relationships with their key knowledge workers, 
in order to keep them committed to the firm, they are smashing the 
implicit social contract with these workers. 

Knowledge workers, like other workers, are now fired when 
not needed or when their skills become obsolete. They, too, see a 
reduction in their real wages when cheaper alternatives are found 
elsewhere in the world. Firms invest less in on-the-job training for 
knowledge workers even when they want them to stay around, 
because they know that in the future fewer of them will stay 
around. If workers are laid off when not needed, the smart ones 
know that they should leave whenever an even marginally better 
job opportunity presents itself. 

*     As job uncertainty rises, the numbers of those with a strong 
interest in the success of their current employers dwindle. Surveys 
show that although attachment to their occupations has remained 
constant for American workers over the past two decades, the 
number of those with a strong attachment to their employers has 
gone down by a fifth. The system is evolving toward less 
commitment and less investment in skills just as it should be moving 
in the opposite direction. 

*     The basic problem is that every employer wants a free ride 
in the training system: "You train, I'll hire". Whenever 
unemployment is low, employers who themselves do no training 
bitterly complain about the shortage of trained workers. They see 
nothing strange about their complaints. 

As for the employees, without career ladders they cannot 
intelligently acquire the right skills on their own. Since they will be 
switching employers frequently, they don't know what skills they 
will need or how long those skills will be relevant to their earning 
opportunities. As a result -- rationally -- they don't invest in skills. 

*     When it is clear that something must be done but rational 
individuals and companies won't do it, society has to reorganize 
itself to make what is individually irrational into something that is 
individually rational. 

There is a simple solution. For example, France levies a training 
tax of 1.5 percent of payroll. The purpose is not to collect taxes but 
to make it rational for every employer to train. Employers can 
deduct their expenditures for training from that 1.5 percent tax. 
Thus if they spend 1.5 percent of their sales on training their work 
force, they pay no tax. Since the money will be taken away from 
them if they don't train, training becomes a free good as far as the 
firm is concerned. 

No one tells employers what skills to teach their workers, but they 
are effectively being told that they must teach some skills. Such a 
system aids everyone. It makes employers invest as if there were 
career ladders even when these have been abolished. If all 
employers have to invest, no one gets a free ride.  

quotes: 

"With career ladders in place, the ambitious worker of the 
1950s or 1960s could figure out what skills were needed for 
advancement. But without career ladders, how does anyone 
rationally plan an educational investment?"

"The system is evolving toward less commitment and less 
investment in skills just as it should be moving in the opposite 
direction..." 


Building Wealth 
--The New Rules for Individuals, Companies and Nations in a 
Knowledge-
based Economy
by Lester C. Thurow
(pub 1999 by Harpercollins)

ISBN 0-887-30951-8
available on www.amazon.com
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0887309518/thejobsres
earctr


LESTER THUROW INTERVIEW ON THE INTERNET
A RealAudio interview (40 mins) from NPR Public Interest 
archives is available on the internet at 
http://www.toad.net/~wamu/ram/p2990615.ram.
Lester Thurow's website is at http://www.lthurow.com/



C R E D I T S   
-------------------   
edited by Vivian Hutchinson for the Jobs Research Trust   
P.O.Box 428, New Plymouth, New Zealand   
phone 06-753-4434 fax 06-759-4648   
Internet address --  [EMAIL PROTECTED]   
   
The Jobs Letter -- an essential information and media watch  
on jobs, employment,  unemployment, the future of work,  
and related economic and education issues.  

The Jobs Research Trust -- a not-for-profit Charitable Trust  
constituted in 1994 to develop and  distribute information that  
will help our communities create more jobs and reduce 
unemployment  and poverty in New Zealand.    
   
Our internet website at 

          http://www.jobsletter.org.nz/

contains our back issues and key papers, 
and hotlinks to other internet resources.

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  • Lester Thurow on Skills and Careers vivian Hutchinson