facts and nonpartisan perspectives on the issues

 
No. 10, March 18, 2008
 

IN THIS ISSUE

Investment in Job Training

 
Urban Institute researchers can provide facts and nonpartisan perspectives on the health of the job market, job training programs, and the state of the skilled workforce.
KEY FACTS
  • Federal projections estimate about 45 percent of the 55 million job openings expected between 2004 and 2014 will be middle-skill jobs, occupations that require more than a high school diploma but less than a four-year degree.
  • While some middle-skill positions have declined in numbers recently—notably manufacturing jobs—others have seen robust growth. Between 1986 and 2006, the number of health technician jobs rose to more than 1 million from about 400,000. The number of positions in construction grew from about 5 million to about 9 million.
  • The number of trained workers is not expected to keep pace with the number of middle-skill jobs over the next decade.
  • Several middle-skill occupations have shown strong wage growth in the past decade. Registered nurses' wages grew by 18 percent and radiological technicians' pay jumped by 23 percent between 1997 and 2005. Average real wages grew by 5 percent during the period.
  • Federal investment in worker training has declined in recent decades. Since 1979, real expenditures on the Department of Labor's largest workforce development efforts have dropped by more than 70 percent to about $5 billion in all.

Additional analysis is available in UI reports:

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Harry HolzerListen to Urban Institute Senior Fellow Harry Holzer, a former chief economist at the U.S. Department of Labor, discuss worker training and today's economy.

 

UI Experts

UI Experts on Investment in Job Training


  • Harry Holzer: Worker training; the working poor; low-wage labor markets.
  • Robert Lerman: Income and wealth distribution; job training; school-to-work initiatives.
  • Margaret Simms: Employment and training; income and wealth; low-wage labor markets; minority labor markets; poverty; welfare reform.
  • Sheila Zedlewski: Poverty; welfare reform; work support programs; state spending for low-income individuals.

To interview a UI expert for columns, editorials, or articles, contact Elizabeth Cronen at 202-261-5723 or ecronen@ui.urban.org