Posted in economy, politics, technology, tagged academia, academic inflation, afford, ahead, America, American Dream, analysis, analytical, appliances, applicants, average, bachelor of arts, bankruptcy, banks, benchmark, Big Business, big fish, blame, bottom lines, boutique, brain drain, branding, built to last, business, capitalism, career, Century, CEO, challenge, cheap, cheaply, child, China, collectible, college, columnist, compete, competitive, complaints, conglomerates, consequences, consumerism, consumers, control, corporate, cost, costly, creative, Daniel Pink, debate, debt, deception, decline, defect, degree, disadvantage, disparity, disposable, doctoral, doctors, Dollar, down waging, downwardly mobile, driven, economic, economic insecurity, economists, economy, edge, education, educators, elite, ethics, expansion, expensive, factory, family, fast buck, feudalism, finances, financial, First World, forecast, foreclosure, free market, free trade, future, game theory, global, globalism, globalization, Google, grad school, Great Recession, Green, hegemony, hidden costs, high end, higher ed, higher learning, hiring, house of cards, human rights, illusion, imbalance, immigration, implications, India, inferior, inhumane, innovator, insource, international, interview, irreplaceable, jobless recovery, jobs, jobs creation, Keynesian, labor, laborers, ladder, laissez faire, Lawrence Katz, lawyers, leaders, level playing field, lies, life span, living wage, longevity, loss, low end, lowest common denominator, Main Street, make work, market, marketing, marriage, masters, MBAs, Microsoft, middle class, MIT, motivated, myths, NAFTA, neocapitalism, new normal, New York Times, noncompetitive, NYT, offshoring, Old South, opportunism, outsource, panacea, perfect market, Ph.D, planned obsolescence, policy, pool, poor workmanship, poverty, prediction, pride, problem solving, product, progress, projections, protections, purchase, quality, quality control, race to the bottom, ramifications, ranking, rational, reality, recruit, Reform, repairs, replace, resume, retailer, retrain, revenues, rise, risk, saturated, scam, schools, security, seeker, silent depression, skills, slave, slippery slope, spending, standard of living, STEM, stimulus, student loans, substitute, succeed, success, superpower, survive, Susan Hockfield, sweat shop, sweatshops, system, talent, taxation, teachers, technology, Third World, Thomas Friedman, thrive, tipping point, Todd Martin, trade, traders, training, transnational, trend, unemployment, unethical, university, untouchables, US, wages, Wall Street, warranty, waste, Whole New Mind, workers, working class, workplace, world, zero sum on October 25, 2009 |
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If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away.
— Henry David Thoreau
In “The New Untouchables “, New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman argues that in this downwardly mobile economy there is no room for average. Extraordinary is what it takes to survive and thrive in the modern workplace.
I get that.
Yet for all my appreciation for education — I hold two degrees so I do, in fact, lean in favor of Friedman’s premise that education is key to American competitiveness — his education-as-a-panacea argument oversteps its reach.
Most strikingly, Friedman’s description of a successful “untouchable” American worker isn’t a portrait of educational endowment at all. Friedman’s favorite descriptors, instead, refer to personality attributes: entrepreneur (risk taker), creative (visionary), analytical (critical thinker), and persuasive (charismatic). The obvious problem with Friedman’s pin-the-tail-on-the-wrong-donkey premise is that temperament is inborn — teachers, let alone parents, cannot instill personality characteristics that are not there to begin with.
Friedman’s eagerness to finger the usual suspects — schools — also ignores six reasons why Americans are at a competitive disadvantage in the global era. Here we examine those realities, and the future these changing times have in store.
First, there are more of us occupying this country — and this planet at large — than ever before. At some point, the mathematics of population growth have to matter. The sheer number of people in today’s workforce suggests more and more people are competing for the same jobs even as we adopt more and more technology to displace human hands. That’s not a sign of a lack of education; it’s a sign that business owners comprehend that productivity gadgets and gizmos don’t require breaks, a salary or workers’ compensation.
It comes down to the numbers.
Second, I would argue the inverse in response to Friedman’s suggestion that there just isn’t enough talent to be had here in the States. Over the past 50-some years there are more colleges turning out more graduates on an annual basis than employers of the past had access to. Many foreign nationals, in fact, come to the US for higher education opportunities. On the flip side, there are only so many engineers, M.B.A.s, lawyers, scientists and the like universities can churn out before higher-end fields become saturated in much the same way low-end jobs are chalk full of contenders.
It’s no longer merely a question of whether there are clear winners and losers on the academic front.
Job scarcity is a threat, in part, because of the decades-long trend of mergers, acquisitions and a globalized labor pool. Consider: There are generally fewer than a dozen heavyweights in a given industry — everything from mainstream media to appliance manufacturing. This trend does not bode well for domestic job expansion. And if jobs aren’t available to begin with, it is tough to gain a competitive advantage even with above-average potential. So what we are seeing, in this author’s opinion, is an over-supply of talent.
But that doesn’t mean the proponents of Friedman’s dire self-fulfilling prophecy won’t get their wish.
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Posted in health, notes on the human condition, tagged 1957, 35 percent less likely, activities, affect, Ann Arbor, apart, appearances, artificial, attendance, blessings, bonds, Bowling Alone, break, breakdown, caregiver, cave, challenges, charity, chips are down, chronic, church, circumstances, closing, club, commitment, commonalities, community, comparisons, competition, connectedness, connection, consequences, cope, data, development, diagnosis, differences, difficult, dignity, disconnect, displaced, distance between, don't be a stranger, downsized, Easy Street, economic, effect, effort, employees, envy, example, exclude, fair weather, fear, friends, friendships, group, groups, hard times, hardship, hermit, how to, identity, illness, implications, individuals, involvement, isolation, Jennie E. Brand, job, job loss, job market, join, Joneses, keeping up, laid off, layoff, leave, livelihood, lives, lonely, long-term impact, longitudinal, Los Angeles, lose, loss, luck, meeting, membership, mental, miss, model, needs, nonprofit, normalcy, notice, organization, others, out of business, outgroup, participation, people, personal, pride, prime of life, professional, PTA, reach out and touch someone, reciprocal, reconnect, recovery, reestablish, regain, regroup, rejection, religious, relocating, repercussions, researchers, respond, restructuring, retreat, role, safety net, service, sever, shorten, skills, social contract, Social Forces, social lives, social science, socialize, sociologists, spiritual, starting over, study, superficial, support group, team, tough people, tough times, trials, UCLA, unemployed, University of California, University of Michigan, US News and World Report, Wisconsin high school graduates, workforce, youth on July 24, 2009 |
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Don’t be a stranger.
That’s the message of a 45-year-long study according to US News and World Report in “Job Loss Has Long-Term Impact on Social Lives“.
Once someone in the prime of life suffers a layoff or is otherwise displaced from the workforce, community connections — anything from a PTA meeting, charity involvement, sporting team or church attendance — are severed for good at least 35 percent of the time, study results show.
Perhaps this comes as a surprise. It shouldn’t. How many of us have grown distant from someone simply because they left our school, workplace, club or church?
And how many of us, by the same token, have isolated ourselves because we fear that others will judge us when the chips are down?
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Posted in notes on the human condition, politics, tagged 2001, abuser, academia, accountability, activism, activist, administration, affirmative action, agenda, America, Appeals Court, appoint, Associated Press, bench, Berkley, bigoted, blind, candidate, cases, caucasians, character, choice, class, congress, conscience, consequence, Constitution, convey, country, court, courtroom, cultural, culture wars, diabetes, Dianne Feinstein, discern, discretion, discretion is the better part of valor, discrimination, dominance, eccentric, elitism, empowerment, equality, ethnic, ethnicity, ethnocentric, express, fire fighters, fixation, gender, Harriet Miers, heritage, Hispanic, history, hubris, human experience, human nature, humanity, identity, identity politics, institutionalized, jockeying, judgment, judicial seat, justice, knowledge, La Raza, language, Latina, law, lawsuits, lecture, liberal, loose cannons, marginalization, nation, nominee, Obama, Obama administration, one-upmanship, perception, politically incorrect, poor, power, power structures, president, pride, privileged, professor, proud, race relations, racialist, racism, radicalization, rational, regrets, restitution, reverse discrimination, Robert Gibbs, school, SCOTUS, self, self esteem, self identification, self promotion, selfish, sentiments, sexism, shortsighted, social position, social theorists, Sonia Sotomayor, sound mind, speech, statement, studies, subjugate, superior, superiority, Supreme Court, tapestry, thought form, true colors, UC, university, US, vetting, victimhood, victimization, vision, vitriol, voters, white male, wisdom, wiser, words on May 30, 2009 |
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Prospective Supreme Court justice Sonia Sotomayor has yet to complete the vetting process but already controversy over a comment she made in 2001 has erupted. In “A Latina Judge’s Voice“, a lecture presented at the law school of the University of California, Berkeley, Sotomayor said that her Latina heritage undeniably plays a role in her judgments. “I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life,” Sotomayor told her audience.
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