A Washington organization dedicated to strengthening U.S. economic clout is
trying to make the issue of improving the skills of American workers a top
political priority.
The Council on Competitiveness, a group of leaders from industry, academia
and the labor community, called for a national skills agenda that would “ensure
a rising standard of living” during a Capitol Hill meeting on Wednesday, April
30.
The council warned that U.S. productivity is threatened by a combination of a
shrinking U.S. workforce and inadequate reading and math skills among those who
are in the labor market.
It urged an increased emphasis on “middle” skills—for jobs that don’t require
a bachelor’s degree but do call for training beyond high school—and “service
economy” skills, such as problem solving, collaboration and teamwork, that
enable workers to interact better with customers.
Although the United States needs to produce more scientists and engineers,
quantity alone is insufficient, the council said. U.S. technology workers need
to have stronger interdisciplinary and entrepreneurial skills.
The recommendations are contained in the council’s report, titled “Thrive:
The Skills Imperative.”
Sen. Max Baucus, D-Montana and chairman of the Senate Finance Committee,
embraced the report and encouraged the council to provide Congress guidance on
the issue.
“Skills are our most sustainable competitive advantage,” Baucus said at the
event launching the council report. “They can be our anchor in the turbulent
world economy we have.”
Baucus took listeners on a verbal tour of Highway 93, which bisects his
state. He mentioned several towns where companies are able to engage in the
global economy because of the quality of their machinists, welders and research
scientists.
“Montana competes with its workforce,” Baucus said. But he also said that he
constantly hears from companies having difficulty attracting and retaining
skilled workers.
A major global technology firm has a similar challenge. James Spohrer,
director of service research at IBM and a council advisor, says the company can
find plenty of engineers and MBAs who are trained to work in manufacturing.
The problem is that IBM has transformed itself from a manufacturing to a
business services company. The universities and colleges where it recruits
haven’t undergone a similar metamorphosis.
Their science, engineering and management curricula continue to focus about
80 percent on manufacturing and 20 percent on services. In the latter area,
students learn about dealing with networks, supply chains, markets and—most
important—customers and their quirks.
“The knowledge economy and the service economy are two sides of the same
coin,” Spohrer said. “We’re not preparing scientists and engineers for the
services economy.”
It’s one thing to bring such concerns to Congress and get a prominent senator
to pay attention. Substantial traction, however, requires putting the issue on
the presidential campaign agenda, a place where it hasn’t popped up so far.
“Competitiveness, education and investment in research has hardly been
addressed at all,” said Norman Augustine, former chairman and CEO of Lockheed
Martin and a council advisor. “There is not yet a real broad understanding among
the populace of the risks we’re taking if we don’t address” workforce issues.
—Mark Schoeff Jr.