While news that job openings are increasing in the United States sounds encouraging, there's a flip side to the latest jobs reports. The uptick in job openings indicates that employers are having difficulty filling jobs. This is often because of the growing skills gap, with millions of so-called "middle skills" jobs going unfilled for months at a time because employees can't be found with the requisite skills.
Middle skills jobs are those that require some training or certification beyond a high school diploma but don't necessarily require a college degree. These middle skills jobs are the largest part of the labor market across the country. The need to fill these positions is expected to grow in the coming years.
What Middle Skills Jobs Are Going Unfilled?
Middle skills jobs are going unfilled in several key fields, including health care and information technology. In addition, skilled trade positions are languishing for lack of people to step in. These jobs, which include machinists, welders, plumbers and electricians, are becoming increasingly hard to fill.
Many middle skills jobs pay well, which makes them potentially attractive if prospective employees can acquire the needed skills. Some jobs that fall into this category include nurses; heating, ventilation and air conditioning installation and repair technicians; auto mechanics; hotel managers; and computer science developers, analysts and administrators.
What Is the Trend?
About 2.5 million middle skills jobs are expected to open up by the end of 2017. Many of these will come as the result of retirement in certain fields, such as electronics engineering, maintenance technicians and electricians. The average age of people who currently hold these jobs is far higher than the average age of workers in general.
The health care sector is expected to grow by 14 percent over the next five years, and the IT sector has a projection of 15 percent growth over the same period. Jobs requiring middle-skills level STEM skills are expected to increase in fields ranging from energy to food production.
What Can Be Done to Close the Skills Gap?
Part of the problem lies in the education system, which tends to channel students toward a four-year college degree as the default option. Without educational or other institutional support to help people entering the workforce gain the required skills, there's no obvious onramp to let prospective employees prepare for middle skills jobs. A White House initiative to put $100 million into developing apprenticeship programs may help in some areas.
Encouraging high school students to head to two-year colleges that teach some of the skills needed for middle skills jobs may help close the gap. Not everyone is cut out for a four-year college, but many students have been led to believe that's the only viable choice if they want to make a good life for themselves.
Many people argue, however, that some employers are simply demanding too much. In past years, employers put more time and effort into training its new hires, helping them to acquire the skills they needed for their jobs. Now, an employer is likely to demand that a new employee already have certain skills without the opportunity to learn them beforehand. In addition, some employers are demanding college degrees for jobs, such as secretarial positions, that haven't traditionally required them.
While employers may have to shift their expectations a bit, it's increasingly clear that the educational and business worlds need to find a way to close the middle skills gap, whether by offering apprenticeships, encouraging students to seek middle-skills training after high school, or increasing job training sponsored by employers. Harnessing the abilities and training of newly discharged veterans to step into some of these unfilled jobs or be trained for them is another remedy that has been proposed. As younger job seekers realize that millions of well-paying jobs are waiting to be filled, they may refocus their job search efforts to gain the skills needed to close the gap.
Photo Courtesy of Stuart Miles at FreeDigitalPhotos.net
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