Posted on 12/05/2009 8:33:19 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
Heres a letter that I sent yesterday to the New York Times:
RE Thursdays White House Jobs Summit (Obama Turns to Job Creation, but Warns of Limited Funds, Dec. 4): the language is misleading.
Jobs themselves do not need to be created, for they are among the most abundant opportunities in our midst. You can paint my house, serve as my personal masseuse, cook my dinners and clean my kitchen every evening. Youre hired! But you refuse, because I wont pay you enough to do so.
Its obviously not jobs that people ultimately want; its opportunities to earn income and in a market economy people earn more income the more value they produce for others. If the word job were replaced with value-producing opportunity, the added clumsiness of expression might be more than made up for by greater clarity of thought, namely, the recognition that what matters is each workers access to opportunities to produce value so that he or she receives in return as much spending power as possible.
Jobs are super-abundant; access to consumable goods and services is not. It is widespread access to the latter that ultimately matters. But this access is diminished by policies that create or protect jobs by taxing and regulating in ways that reduce the economys capacity to grow and produce the valuable goods and services that are the ultimate motivation for people to work.
Sincerely, Donald J. Boudreaux
The author has an excellent point.
Let’s look at one of my favorite hobby horses: the endless stream of know-nothing liberal arts majors flowing out of American colleges and universities. All of these bright-eyed students thinking that they’ll get some well-paid job because they’ve been propagandized with the idea that “a college degree is the path to a good job.” They get into the real world and discover that, no, there isn’t much in the way of demand for liberal arts majors, and their career prospects are dim in the US economy and have been getting only worse for at least 20 years.
On the flip side, allow me to point out that there will be an estimated 500,000+ welders needed in the next five years or so (estimate I’m quoting is from the American Welding Society). Welders work in rough conditions many times, but the thing about welding is this: these jobs can’t be outsourced. The idiot Harvard MBA’s cannot find a way to ship a bridge to India or China for welding and have it shipped back. They can outsource the steel, bolt and other component production, but the in situ welding has to be done here.
Certified welders make good money.
Certified pipeline welders make very good money.
No four-year degree needed. There’s no need to go to some Ivy League school and graduate with over $100K in student loans. You merely have to be a hard worker, have good eyes, a steady hand and attention to detail, and you too can be making over $50K/year pretty quick in your early 20’s. Experienced welders with experience in TIG as well as stick can be pulling down 40 to 50 bucks an hour. I see ads for experienced rig welders here in Wyoming that are paying over $40/hour.
On top of that, if you come to the job with your own welding rig, the company a per-hour rental of your rig + your fuel and provides your rod and consumables.
What’s the catch? The person holding this job has to WORK. As in, in the summer heat, in the winter cold (which in Wyoming isn’t an academic issue, and isn’t that pussy-foot cold like in NYC - we’re sometimes talking sub-zero, with 10 to 50 MPH breezes on your back), down in a ditch, up in the air, out in the middle of nowhere for a weeks at a clip. Often you have to sleep in shabby little motels in East Podunk when you do get to town, or you’re in a company man-camp’s single-wide with a couple other guys. When you have to put up in podunk motels, you’re paid a per diem.
Clean, boring Dilbertesque cubical living this isn’t.
Why are these guys getting paid so much? Because the demand for energy isn’t going away. Pipelines have to be built. Drill rigs have to operate. Wells are punched in. Big metal is going to be put together by someone, and those that are willing to learn how to do it will be paid well for it.
Welding is just one job. There’s pipefitters, equipment operators, diesel mechanics, riggers, etc - all needed on these projects all over the economy. There’s a big wave of Boomer tradesmen retiring from now to 10 years out from now, and there are nowhere near enough young people taking up the trades to replace them.
All these people add value to the economy.
Another pink-faced twerp with a BA isn’t.
Right on. Friend didn’t spend time at the U. Learned tool & die & started his own business. Did better than his brother with PhD — of course he had to WORK & WORRY & take care of business while the government funded PhD spent 6 or 10 hours a WEEK teaching & had pensions out the gazoo because it was government paid for & when he died left money to NPR.
& who is the winner? The one who was sorry he went into the wrong field & would have got more publications if he’d picked something else or the one who actually took responsibility & took care of other people & was his own man.
& isn’t that what the whole University things is about? The greatest theft of money from the poor to the middle class is university education. For which we pay gazillions to left liberal college professors who work very little and corrupt the youth. Take Ayers for instance.
Bookmark.
The lady at Starbucks who sold it to me has a MA in Fine Arts.
(But she forgot the the topping)
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