Title: World Illiteracy
1Mobilizing to Attract Skilled Workers to High
Tech Manufacturing Edward E. Gordon
More Better Preventing a Workforce Meltdown
2(No Transcript)
3What?
4Economic Development Merging with Workforce
Development
5Flash Gordons Time Machine
6Why?
7Demographics Technology Globalization
8World Demographics
9U.S. Workforce between 2010 2025
- Baby Boomers - 79 million Americans born
1946-64 retire - Generation X - 40 million Americans born
1965-77 - Less job ready than baby
boomers - Generation Y - 70 million Americans born
1977-95 - Less job ready than prior
generations
10Technology ResultsUnskilled Jobs Are
Disappearing
Source Center for Economic Development,
Carnegie-Mellon, 2003
11U.S. Jobs Shifts 2000-2020(In Millions)
- Job Categories 2000 2010 2020
- Professionals/Executives 44 52
60 - Sales, Technical 42 50 60
- Tech Support/ Skilled Craft 22 29
43 - Low End Service 20 25 27
- Other Low Skill Jobs 24 21 17
Source U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2005
12U.S. Talent Challenge
- 2010-2020 Jobs vs. Todays
Workforce - 75 High Pay 25 of Workers
- Require Career Prepared
for - Prep. Career-Based Jobs
- 25 Low-Pay 75 of Workers
- (10-12 hr.)
Prepared for - Low-Skill Jobs Nothing
Source Edward E. Gordon, 2010
13The System
14The System isbroken
15Who?
16National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)
- 2005 Reading Achievement Scores
- (1) (2) (3)
(4) - Below
- Levels Basic Basic Proficient Advanced
- U.S. 29 39 29 3
- (Below Basic Basic 68)
Source National Center for Education Statistics,
2007
17National Adult Literacy Assessments1993/2003
Prose Results Compared
- Adult Pop. 2003
- Categories 93/03 Total 222 Million
- I. Below Basic 14/14 31M
- II. Basic 28/29 64M (95M)
- III. Intermediate 43/44 98M
- (Moderately Challenging)
- IV. Proficient 15/13 29M
-
-
18U.S. Labor MarketJob Growth 2004-2014
Category New Replace-ment of Total Total
All Jobs 18.9M 35.8M 65 54.7M
Nurses 1.2M 703K 41 1.2M
Assemblers, Fabricators 78K 538K 87 616K
Metal Workers 0 562K 100 562K
Machinists 16K 86K 84 102K
Welders 19K 121K 86 140K
Source Daniel E. Hecker, Monthly Labor Review,
2005
19U.S. Labor MarketTalent Shortages 2010-2020
- Category Shortfall
- All Jobs 3M-6.1M
- Nurses 340K-1M
- Engineers 150K-250K
- Assemblers, Fabricators 100K-200K
- Metal Workers 100K-200K
- Machinists 150K-250K
- Welders 50K-80K
Sources Bureau of Labor Statistics
Professional Associations
20Manufacturing as Percent of Total Employment
21United States Manufacturing 2005
- 1 in Value of Manufactured Products
- (Double Chinas)
- 61 of U.S. Exports
-
Source Economist Intelligence Unit
22Metal Manufacturing Leading Concerns
2310 Hardest-To-Fill Jobs in the U.S.
- Sales Representative
- Teacher
- Mechanic
- Technician
- Management/Executive
- Truck Driver
- Driver/Delivery
- Accountant
- Laborer
- Machine Operator
Source Manpower, 2007
24Small BusinessUnfilled Positions Near Record
High
- Businesses Hiring or
- Attempting to Hire 50
- Reporting Few or
- Unqualified Applicants 80
- Firms with One or More
- Unfilled Positions 31
-
- Source National Federation of Independent
Businesses (NIFB), April 2006
25U.S. Jobs Unfilled
- 2003-2007
- 1,000,000
- Average 4.2M Vacancies
Source U.S. Department of Labor
26- There is a supply problem in
- our labor markets.
- - William Dunkelberg, Chief Economist
- National Federation of Independent
- Businesses
27Increases in Wages 2007
- United States 4.5
- India/China 20
28When?
292008
30Annual Growth Rates ofU.S. Labor Force 1950-2030
31Where?
32U.S. State GDP Size Comparisons
Chicago Tribune analysis of U.S. Dept. of
Commerce IMF data
33GDP Comparisons (in trillions 2006)
342010-2020 A Decade of Opportunity
3510 Hardest-To-Fill Jobs Worldwide
- Sales Representative
- Skilled Manual Trade Worker
- Technician
- Engineer
- Accounting Finance Staff
- Laborer
- Production Operator
- Driver
- Management/Executive
- Machinist/Operator
Source 2007 Manpower Inc, Annual Talent Survey
Shortage
36Source Federal Statistical Office
of Germany
37Top 10 U.S. States in Number of Jobs at
Foreign-Owned Companies
- California 561,000
- New York 382,600
- Texas 339,300
- Illinois 254,900
- Florida 248,900
- Pennsylvania 227,700
- New Jersey 223,200
- Ohio 208,600
- Michigan 205,000
- North Carolina 204,600
Source U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of
Economic Analysis
38How?
3921st Century U.S. Apprenticeship (2003)
- 850 Occupations
- 70-75 Skilled Trades
- 15-20 Industrial/Manufacturing
- 29,326 Registered Programs
- 480,000 Apprentices
- 28,768 Graduates (2003)
Source U. S. Department of Labor
40Advanced Manufacturing Apprenticeships
- National Institute for Metalworking Skills, Inc.
- (NIMS)
- Registered Apprenticeship Model
41Career Culture Change
42Human Ability Areas
- Linguistics
- Logical-Mathematical
- Spatial
- Musical
- Bodily Fine-Gross Motor
- Interpersonal
- Intrapersonal
Source Robert J. Sternberg, 1996
43Non-Governmental Organizations
44 Q. What is a NGO? A. An intermediary
agency that builds a network.
45U.S. NGOs
- Fargo, North Dakota
- Santa Ana, California
- Mansfield, Ohio
- Mt. Airy, North Carolina
- Duluth, Minnesota
- Jacksonville, Florida
46Chicago
- ? Jobs for Youth
- Contact Robert Barnett
- ? The Tutor-Mentor Connection
- Contact Dan Bassill
47The 2010 Solution
Business
Educators
Labor
Parents Students
Government
NGO Intermediary Agency
Liberal Arts Education Career Prep.
Incumbent Worker Lifelong Learning
Employment High Wage/High Skill Economy Expands
48(No Transcript)
49More Better Preventing a Workforce
MeltdownFor more information, go
towww.imperialcorp.comor contact
- Dr. Edward E. Gordon imperialcorp_at_juno.com
- 312-664-5196