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Here's Why Wages Might Rise Despite Millions Of Unemployed Being Available For Work
Of Two Minds ^ | 08/11/2014 | CHARLES HUGH SMITH

Posted on 08/11/2014 7:43:00 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Tragically, the inability of our institutions to impart the skills required by the emerging economy hobble not just the unemployed but employers.


A reader recently offered a compelling reason why total compensation costs (wages plus benefits/payroll taxes) could rise even in a stagnant economy with millions available for work: many of those who have been out of work for a long time (or have yet to hold a formal job) are unqualified by experience and professionalism to perform the work that is available.

This is a complex topic, so let's separate the key issues.

1. Inability to perform the available work successfully on a sustained basis is a problem across the entire spectrum from low-skill to high skill. On the face of it, just about anyone who isn't disabled should be able to do low-skill farm labor such as harvesting fruits and vegetables, etc.

But anecdotal evidence suggests many unemployed Americans are incapable of doing this kind of demanding physical labor on a sustained basis: stories abound of native-born Americans working in the fields for a few hours or days and then giving up.

At the higher-skill end of the spectrum, those who have been out of work for years may find that their skillset has been leapfrogged by technology, and it's cheaper/more efficient for employers to poach workers from competitors than it is to train workers who lack the specific skills needed.

The American Model of "Growth": Overbuilding and Poaching (November 19, 2013)

Though it may seem counter-intuitive to non-employers, it's actually cheaper and lower risk to pay a higher salary to poach a competitor's employee because you can be confident the employee can start producing value on Day One, where if you hire a long-unemployed worker, you are taking the risk the person has lost the ability to perform at a high level, and you're taking on the expense and time required to retrain them.

Training takes time and investment, and it's easier to hire employees from competitors than invest the time/money in training new employees.


2. Ageism. Ageism cuts both ways: Baby Boomers are clinging on to their jobs rather than retiring because they need the higher income. In jobs with tenure (such as virtually every government or union job), this trend ties employers into paying the highest wage scale and healthcare costs because it's generally illegal to force someone to retire against their will.

On the other end of the scale, older workers often find employers prefer younger employees--not just because they will accept lower wages (and lower healthcare costs) but because the employers may assume their skills are more up to date.

Anecdotally, sectors dominated by tenure/union contracts will experience higher total compensation costs as their workforce clings to their jobs as they age.

3. Work is more demanding than ever. The pool of people claiming to want work appears large, but the demands made on employees is rising constantly as corporate employers seek higher productivity. A significant number of people are simply unable to perform the work at the sustained level of productivity required nowadays.

An employee who could keep up 20 years ago or even 10 years ago may fall behind in today's work environment.

We might recall the 80/20 Pareto Distribution here: as a rule of thumb, 20% of employees are responsible for 80% of the department's output/sales (this is not exact, but it is nonetheless remarkably accurate).

Employers are willing to bid up compensation for the top 20% who generate the majority of the output/sales, etc.

4. Healthcare costs are still soaring for employers. While a few data points suggest total healthcare spending has leveled off, this is likely the result of ObamaCare pushing the first $5,000 of expenses onto the "insured" with Bronze Plans.

(If "healthcare" requires ponying up $5,000 in deductibles, how is that even "insurance"? In my view, is it a simulacrum of insurance.)

In other words, now that they have to pay the first $5,000 for care in cash, people are not going to the doctor.

Meanwhile, employers are getting stiffed by much higher premiums. Using my own bare-bones coverage as a baseline, my monthly healthcare insurance fee has shot up about 20% in the past two years. Plans with better coverage increased even more.

Unknown to most employees, there is a tax in ObamaCare paid by employers. That raises total compensation costs even though employees don't see it in their paychecks.

5. Slashing head count has reached marginal returns. The majority of corporate employers have already outsourced/automated the low-hanging fruit of their labor force, and what's left in the U.S. remains for a reason: it serves the U.S. market or does work that produces high value (for example, managing overseas divisions, designing products made overseas, etc.)

So we have a diminishing number of jobs that can be outsourced and a diminishing number of qualified people who can do the work.

6. Minimum wages are rising in many locales as higher costs outstrip entry-level earnings. Rather than engage in the debate over whether higher minimum wages are good or bad, let's stipulate that minimum wages are rising a a number of communities, and in aggregate, this pushes compensation costs up.

It's un-PC to say out loud than many of the unemployed are unhireable because they lack the basic "people skills" of professional manners, the desire or ability to learn, the willingness to persevere and prove their worth to employers, etc.

This pressure to be politically correct inhibits an honest discussion of the disconnect between graduates from high school and college and the skills, values and professionalism needed by employers.

I have listed what I consider the eight essential skills of professionalism in my book Get a Job, Build a Real Career and Defy a Bewildering Economy, based on my own experience as a employer and as a managing employee.

Those without these basic skills have a tough time qualifying for any job, even an entry job in retail or fast-food service.

I fault our dysfunctional, disconnected education system for this failure to teach the basic skills of being employable. Fortunately, anyone can learn these skills on their own, but this is a process that demands a lot of potential employees: self-awareness, perseverance, a willingness to seek out mentors and community-based (often unpaid) work to acquire skills and connections, etc.

To sum up: let's say there are 15 million people who say they want work. But maybe only a few million actually have the skills, values and experience in hand to qualify for the jobs that are available.

That mismatch--in addition to the other factors listed above--could push total labor compensation costs higher even in an economy that appears to have a lot of slack in its labor market.

Personally, I don't see how any small-business employer could afford to hire anyone but those in the top 20% of work ethic, accountability, honesty, willingness to learn new skills, communication skills, etc.

Despite an abundance of lip-service paid to entrepreneurial skills, it seems our educational institutions have largely failed to pass on these skills, which are alien to protected bureaucracies such as those of institutionalized education. To ask a bureaucrat who is forced to adhere to a bunch of disconnected-from-the-real-world guidelines to "teach" entrepreneurism is to ask the impossible.

Tragically, this inability of our institutions to impart the skills required by the emerging economy hobble not just the unemployed but employers. As a result, I see labor costs rising in the years ahead despite an apparent surplus of people willing to work.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Society
KEYWORDS: unemployment; wages

1 posted on 08/11/2014 7:43:00 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
At the higher-skill end of the spectrum, those who have been out of work for years may find that their skillset has been leapfrogged by technology, and it's cheaper/more efficient for employers to poach workers from competitors than it is to train workers who lack the specific skills needed.

In other words, employers have become TOO DAMNED CHEAP to invest even one penny of their own money into employee training, and instead have bought into the big lie of the education establishment that they can churn ready-made employees out of colleges and universities who are ready to go to work with no training.

Maybe "too damned cheap" isn't quite accurate. More likely MBA's who are trained to turn their nose up at anything that does not produce ROI within 90 days are making these decisions.


2 posted on 08/11/2014 7:55:31 AM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: Buckeye McFrog

A lot of this has to do with the faster pace of business these days. If you suddenly discover or decide you need a project done in 90 or 180 days, and you don’t have suitable workers to do it, you have little choice but to run out and hire skilled people. In many cases, contractors who charge high rates will get the job.


3 posted on 08/11/2014 8:00:10 AM PDT by proxy_user
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To: SeekAndFind
Despite an abundance of lip-service paid to entrepreneurial skills, it seems our educational institutions have largely failed to pass on these skills, which are alien to protected bureaucracies such as those of institutionalized education. To ask a bureaucrat who is forced to adhere to a bunch of disconnected-from-the-real-world guidelines to "teach" entrepreneurism is to ask the impossible.

This paragraph sums it up pretty damn nicely.

If you want REAL training for these skills, seek out someone who has "been there, done that". You are most likely to find them teaching a night class maybe on-line, at a community college or as an adjunct professor.

Of course, there is no guarantee you will find them there because many of these positions are filled by wannabe tenured professors, most of whom are too divorced from the real world to do the job. Start by looking for professors at least 40 or older with solid resumes in the business world.

4 posted on 08/11/2014 8:02:28 AM PDT by Vigilanteman (Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)
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To: SeekAndFind
At the higher-skill end of the spectrum, those who have been out of work for years may find that their skillset has been leapfrogged by technology, and it's cheaper/more efficient for employers to poach workers from competitors than it is to train workers who lack the specific skills needed.

Both times I was unemployed for a significant length of time (1992 and 1997), once I finally found another position I received job offers from the other places where I had interviewed. It’s sort of like how women start coming out of the woodwork after you’re married.

5 posted on 08/11/2014 8:17:43 AM PDT by Menehune56 ("Let them hate so long as they fear" (Oderint Dum Metuant), Lucius Accius (170 BC - 86 BC))
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To: SeekAndFind
stories abound of native-born Americans working in the fields for a few hours or days and then giving up

Bunk. If you work in fields with Mexicans you find out rapidly that they hate you and they will harass, intimidate and threaten you for taking "their" jobs.

That's happened in not just California strawberry fields but construction sites and restaurants across the U.S.

And as far as they are concerned, if the Americans are too weak to stop them, then they don't deserve the job.

One more thing. Automation can do away with much of the manual labor associated with agriculture, and has in places where it's been allowed to. In California, the UFW and other Mexican ethnic agitator organizations have prevented automation from being implemented. This means armies of Los Campesinos, who can be used for political power.

And that's what they really want.

6 posted on 08/11/2014 8:20:14 AM PDT by Regulator
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To: SeekAndFind
I find most of this article to be unprecedented nonsense.

The reason why no one is hiring the 15 million, Actually 25 million, is because they are not needed and wages have NOT increased anywhere close to the cost of inflation for almost ANYONE!

This guy is as divorces from reality as most who are working. Companies are showing record profits, OVERSEAS, as they expand into China and India. The domestic numbers suck. Any profits are derived from increases in stock value and holdings driven higher and higher by QE 1, 2, 3, FOREVER! As for any increases in consumer spending, they are always spikes followed by sharp drops. Sometimes you have to leave the bunker to buy more rice and peanut butter.

Once the bubble busts, the endless stream of layoffs will increase. Remember we already have 300,000 people a week being laid off. The real hires barely keep up. The raw numbers are still disastrous.

7 posted on 08/11/2014 8:39:32 AM PDT by Jim from C-Town (The government is rarely benevolent, often malevolent and never benign!)
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To: SeekAndFind

“But anecdotal evidence suggests many unemployed Americans are incapable of doing this kind of demanding physical labor on a sustained basis: stories abound of native-born Americans working in the fields for a few hours or days and then giving up.

At the higher-skill end of the spectrum, those who have been out of work for years may find that their skillset has been leapfrogged by technology, and it’s cheaper/more efficient for employers to poach workers from competitors than it is to train workers who lack the specific skills needed.”

Sorry Charles those are nice anecdotes but there is NO evidence to support those comments. What is true is that urban youth and the entitlement set do not want to work hard at anything. What also is true is that the H1B visas have undercut wages in tech for decades. It is always easier to get a new grad or a foreign national to work ridiculous hours for crap pay rather than those in the mid to end of their careers. Tech hasn’t outstripped them but the snot nosed 20 somethings that think their stuff don’t stink and all their ideas are great ignore the wisdom of their elders.


8 posted on 08/11/2014 8:53:55 AM PDT by Nifster
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To: SeekAndFind

Come onnnnnnn Yellowstone!
We need a good global natural disaster.


9 posted on 08/11/2014 9:04:58 AM PDT by Born to Conserve
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To: Vigilanteman

My problem with business school and the entreprenuerial courses is they teach you the theory but not the actual application.

So yes a person can do the business plan and present it, but not understand how to go out and get the licenses and registrations required to actually start the business compliantly - once they do... their biz case is different due to all the regulatory burden and it makes less sense then originally proposed.


10 posted on 08/11/2014 9:14:51 AM PDT by reed13k (For evil to triumph it is only necessary for good men to do nothings)
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To: reed13k
FWIW, my kid brother is one of these non tenured professors. He actually ran a successful general contracting business for a number of years before the real estate bubble burst and his competitors employing illegals for cash under the table undermined his business to the extent that he closed shop and went back to college for his PhD.

He hoped to land a tenure track gig sometime, but in the meantime, his courses are gaining a niche audience because he's one of the few who has 'been there, done that.'

11 posted on 08/11/2014 10:06:31 AM PDT by Vigilanteman (Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)
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To: SeekAndFind

12 posted on 08/11/2014 12:19:29 PM PDT by Organic Panic
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