WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT: WHAT WORKS? WHO BENEFITS? Harry J. Holzer Georgetown University The Urban Institute February 2010

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Transcription:

WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT: WHAT WORKS? WHO BENEFITS? Harry J. Holzer Georgetown University The Urban Institute February 2010 1

Outline Labor Market: Demand v. Supply of Skills; Middle- v. High-Skill Jobs Effective Policies: The Ideal v. the Reality; Proven and Promising Approaches How to Go Forward: Federal and State Policy Short-Term v. Longer-Term 2

Demand: Middle-Skill Jobs Remain Plentiful Good-Paying Jobs in High Demand: Now Mostly Require Post-Secondary Education/Training or Work Experience Notion of Hourglass or Dumbbell Economy Oversold Substantial Demand Remains in the Middle Skill Sectors/Jobs Key Sectors: Health Care, Construction, Manufacturing, Legal/Protective Services ( Green Jobs/Infrastructure) 3

Examples of Mid-Skill Jobs Construction: Supervisors, Electricians, Plumbers Engineering: Technicians Healthcare: Dental Hygienists, Radiation Therapists, Sonographers, Radiologic Technicians, Respiratory Therapists, OT and PT Assistants Manufacturing: Supervisors, Machinists, Welders/Cutters Legal/Protective Services: Detectives, Paralegals/Legal Assistants, Police/Fire Installation/Maintenance/Repair Jobs 4

Figure 2. Job Openings by Skill Level, 2004-2014 Low 22% High 33% Middle 45% 5

Labor Supply: Education and Training Lag Behind ¼ of All Ninth Graders Drop Out of HS Another ¼: Graduate but No Postsecondary College Enrollees: High Rates of Noncompletion - Even at Community College! (Remediation) Post-School Training for Youth and Adults: Very Limited Both Formal and Informal On-the-Job Training Why??? Basic Skills, Costs, Motivation and Information, Family Responsibilities 6

Demand-Supply Imbalances Will Likely Grow Over Time Baby Boomer Retirements (?) Replacement by Immigrants: Concentrated Mostly at Lowest (and Highest) Levels of Education Outsourcing of Jobs: Maybe Weaken Labor Markets Overall But Not in These Sectors (H. Holzer and R. Lerman, America s Forgotten Middle-Skill Jobs, The Workforce Alliance, 2007) 7

Figure 3: Actual and Projected Changes in Shares of Worker Supply by Level of Education 8

Effects on Labor Market Outcomes Poverty and Low Earnings Among the Disadvantaged; Inequality! Inefficiency in Key Sectors, as Employers Report Difficulty Filling Jobs With Moderate Skill Needs Even in the Downturn! (e.g., Welders) 9

What Would an Effective Education and Workforce System Look Like? Improved Secondary and Post-Secondary Education and Training Options for Disadvantaged Youth/Adults Better Alignment between Education/Training and Demand Side of Labor Market: Meeting Unmet Demand for Good Jobs in Growing Sectors Supports and Services 10

Post-Secondary Education Preparation at Secondary School Level: Academic/College Prep plus High-Quality Career and Technical Education Options (Career Academies, etc.) Range of Upward Pathways Postsecondary Options: Community and Technical Colleges, Proprietary Colleges, 4-Year Colleges and Universities, Other Training Providers Certificates and 2-Year Degrees: Some, but not all, are Well Rewarded in the Labor Market (Lou Jacobson) 11

Alignment with Demand-Side of Market Both General and Specific Skills; Academic and Occupational Flexibility if Demand Shifts Models: 1) Sectoral Training; 2) Career Pathways; 3) Incumbent Worker Training Trainees Need Information on Labor Market Rewards and Providers Need Incentives to Meet Demand (Community Colleges) 12

Supports and Services Intermediaries to Connect Workers with Training and Jobs Based on Labor Market Data Child Care, Transportation Stipends During Training/Transitional Jobs Income/Benefit Supplements for Low-Skill Workers and Their Families 13

Current System: Falls Short Funding Too Low: Dramatic Declines over Time in Federal Funding for Labor Dept. (Education v. Labor) Fragmented System: Across Agencies, Geographic Units, and Key Participants (Few Institutional Linkages, Little Information, Poor Incentives) Too Little Rigorous Evidence on What Works Promising v. Proven Approaches 14

Federal Funding Workforce Investment Act, Title I: $5B in $14T Economy Decline by Over 70% since 1979, 90% in Relative Terms Lowest Share of Any Industrial Nation Pell Grants Have Risen But Limited Effectiveness to Date 15

Fragmentation By Agencies: Labor, Education, Health and Human Services ( Silos ) Education and Supports Disconnected from Workforce System By Geography: Urban/County Workforce Investment Boards within Metro Areas By Participants: Employers, Workers and Providers Disconnected from Each Other Few Institutional Pipelines or Linkages 16

Information and Incentives Students Poorly Informed About Labor Market Rewards to Courses/Curricula and Certificates (High School and College) Institutions (Community Colleges): Few Incentives to Align with Labor Market Reimbursements are Same across Students and Courses, While Some High-Demand Areas (Health Care, Technical) are More Expensive 17

Cost-Effectiveness: Promising v. Proven Approaches Heckman Critique: Accurate??? Mixed Picture on Cost-Effectiveness Different Groups: One Size Doesn t Fit All! Adults Working Poor v. Hard-to-Employ Youth In-School v. Out-of-School Replicating Successful Efforts and Bringing to Scale Preventing Fade-Out 18

Adults Working Poor: Sectoral Models (studies by Center for Employment Training and Public/Private Ventures) and Career Pathways; Integrating Remedial and Occupational Training (I-Best); Intermediaries (Temps, etc.) Hard-to-Employ: Supported Work/Transitional Jobs (Center for Employment Opportunity); Supplements to Low-Earning Jobs (Earned Income Tax Credit; Jobs Plus) 19

Youth: In School Preparation for College/Mentoring; Dual Enrollment in High School Community College Programs: Performance- Based Scholarships, Learning Communities, Mandatory Services (Opening Doors) High-Quality Career and Technical Education: Career Academies, Tech-Prep, Apprenticeships 20

Youth: Out of School Residential Programs: Job Corps, ChalleNGe Fade Out? Service Employment: YouthBuild, Service and Conservation Corps Reconnecting to Community College: Gateways Youth Systems: Youth Opportunities Program, Philadelphia Youth Network 21

Going Forward: What to Do (Federal Level) Workforce Investment Act Reauthorization More Funding! Better Performance Measures: Longer-Term Education and Earnings, Population-Wide Measures, Consistency across Systems, Incentives to Scale (Leveraging Other Systems/Programs) Competitive Grants for Advancement Systems 22

Going Forward: What to Do (Federal Level) (Cont d) American Graduation Initiative (Community Colleges) Competitive Grants to Colleges and States for Curricula/Supports/System Changes plus Research/Evaluation Pell Grant Reforms (Dynarski) Efforts for Youth: Workforce Investment Act, Perkins, Elementary and Secondary Education Act/Higher Education Act 23

What States Can Do (With Federal Support) Identify Growing Sectors (Demand) and Different Skill Groups (Supply) Build Pathways Curricula and Supports at Community Colleges Develop Linkages (Partnerships) between Industry, Training Providers (Community Colleges and Others), Relevant Agencies and Intermediaries Education and Workforce Systems Improve Information (Data) and Incentives Experiment and Evaluate! (Ongoing Efforts) 24

What About the Downturn??? Severe and Persistent Less-Skilled Populations: Hard Hit! Little Access to Safety Net Good Time to Educate/Train. Importance of Paid Work Experience! Stipends for Work/Public Service Employment Opportunities in Recovery Package Infrastructure/ Green Jobs, etc.- Sectoral Approaches 25