U.S. Employers Say They Can’t Find Skilled Workers

Should they be training their own? And why did they stop in the first place?

Dwyer Gunn
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A truck loaded with a shipping container drives through the Port of Oakland on September 03, 2019 in Oakland, California.
A truck loaded with a shipping container drives through the Port of Oakland on September 03, 2019 in Oakland, California. Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty

FFor several years now, the U.S. job market has been booming. And for even longer, companies have had the same complaint: They can’t find enough skilled workers. Businesses across a wide swath of industries, particularly trucking, restaurants, health care, and tech, report problems finding people with enough know-how to do the work.

This policy area has been a focus of the administration for years now. In 2018, the president signed an executive order, tasking a new “Council for the American Worker” with improving the federal government’s patchwork of job training programs and expanding apprenticeship and midcareer training programs. Yet, despite the administration’s attention, employers continue to struggle. A recent survey from the National Federation of Independent Businesses found that 35% of small business owners had job openings they were unable to fill in August, and 89% of those hiring reported having “few or no qualified applicants” for their open positions. More than a quarter of small business owners surveyed said finding qualified workers was their most important business problem.

This raises an interesting question: Why are so few businesses providing the job training…

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Dwyer Gunn
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Journalist covering economics for @Medium. Words for @nytimes @Slate @NYMag. @Freakonomics alum. Email: dwyer.gunn@gmail.com