Editors Note: More Skills Needed for Unemployed to Be Included in Economic Recovery
November 2011
Meanwhile, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke criticized Congress for not doing enough to stimulate the economy. The White House's jobs proposal is stalled in Congress, which is also struggling to reduce the deficit.
Not helping the jobs situation is productivity growth, i.e., companies are doing more with fewer workers. The Labor Department reports productivity rose at an annual rate of 3.1 percent in the third quarter of 2011. Labor costs also dropped at an annual rate of 2.4 percent in the July-September period - the first decline since 2010. Both of these developments are good news for companies, but not for workers.
In fact, U.S. manufacturers remain upbeat about their own companies and plan to spend accordingly. Seventy-five percent of the industrial manufacturing executives surveyed by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) for its Q3 Manufacturing Barometer expect revenue growth over the next 12 months, with 22 percent actually expecting double-digit growth. Importantly, over the next 12 months, 55 percent of those responding to the PwC survey plan to make major capital investments, but only 38 percent said they expect to hire more workers.
Will these new employees come from the ranks of the 2.4 million manufacturing workers who have been laid off since 2007? Do they have the advanced skills that manufacturers want? Those possessed by the baby-boomers who are retiring on a daily basis?
The Manufacturing Institute believes those skilled workers will be difficult to replace. Training programs are needed to teach new work force entrants, as well as the unemployed, the advance skills recently described by Motoko Rich, economic writer for The New York Times, e.g., operating and maintaining computerized machinery, reading complex blueprints, and demonstrating higher machine proficiency. With that in mind, The Manufacturing Institute is launching a fast-track education and training program built on NAM's endorsed Manufacturing Skills Certification System. "Right Skills Now" is an accelerated education solution to train and deliver talent to manufacturers so that they can sustain and expand operations. But, more importantly, that talent must be able to adapt and learn in a rapidly changing business environment if it is to participate in an economic recovery.
Project Announcements
Crust Craft Expands Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, Production Operations
03/27/2025
Chobani Plans Expands Twin Falls, Idaho Production Operations
03/27/2025
Kalamazoo Outdoor Gourmet Expands Comstock Township, Michigan, Manufacturing Operations
03/26/2025
Triad Manufacturing Expands St. Louis, Missouri, Operations
03/26/2025
Sweden-Based Munters Expands Botetourt County, Virginia, Production Operations
03/26/2025
Ergon Refining Expands Vicksburg, Mississippi, Refinery Operations
03/26/2025
Most Read
-
NEW NIMBYism: A Threat to The U.S. Economy
Q4 2024
-
Power, Policy, and Site Selection in 2025
Q1 2025
-
Designing Beyond the Assembly Line
Q1 2025
-
Forging Solid Foundations
Q1 2025
-
Industries Look for Employees in Nontraditional Spaces Amid Labor Shortage
Q4 2024
-
What to Make of the Rising Trend of Salary Transparency in Job Descriptions
Q4 2024
-
Why Decarbonization Goals Start with Site Selection
Q4 2024