Study Blows Labor Shortage Claim Out Of The Water

Origanalist

Member
Joined
Feb 25, 2012
Messages
43,054
Large numbers of Americans, especially those with less education, continue to have difficulty finding work, undermining arguments that there is a “labor shortage” and need for increased immigration, a new study from the Center for Immigration Studies finds.
The report, provided exclusively to Breitbart News, shows that the employment situation of American workers has gradually declined over the past 14 years since 2000.

The number of working age adults who are not working has risen relatively quickly in the last 15 years. In 2000, 35.8 million native-born Americans between 18 and 65 years weren't working. In 2006, the number was 40.5 million. In part because of the recession, the number spiked, and it 2013, stood at 50.5 million people.

The percentage of American adults who are not working has also gradually increased, from 24.1 percent in 2000 to 25.7 percent in 2006 before spiking upward 30.8 percent in 2013.

The study found the decline in employment cut across all racial, educational, and demographic groups. While native-born African Americans and Hispanics are the hardest hit races and decreased education seems to exacerbate the problem, all Americans have seen a downward slope in employment attainment success since 2000.

“Congress is currently considering immigration reform packages that include work permits for those in the country illegally, as well as substantial increases in future legal immigration,” CIS’s Steven Camarota and Karen Ziegler wrote in the report. “Yet the latest employment data continue to show an enormous number of working-age Americans not working, particularly those with modest levels of education.”

continued...http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2014/03/12/Study-Blows-Labor-Shortage-Claim-Out-Of-The-Water
 
Wow. Their solution to unemployment is to increase competition for existing jobs by increasing the number of people that are seeking a job. Lets "Spend" our way out of Debt!
 
Wow. Their solution to unemployment is to increase competition for existing jobs by increasing the number of people that are seeking a job. Lets "Spend" our way out of Debt!

"Let the free market work" (with welfare )
 
Large numbers of Americans, especially those with less education, continue to have difficulty finding work, undermining arguments that there is a “labor shortage” and need for increased immigration, a new study from the Center for Immigration Studies finds.

As far as I have heard, the claimed labor shortage is not at the lower end of the "skill scale" but in skilled labor.

“Congress is currently considering immigration reform packages that include work permits for those in the country illegally, as well as substantial increases in future legal immigration,” CIS’s Steven Camarota and Karen Ziegler wrote in the report. “Yet the latest employment data continue to show an enormous number of working-age Americans not working, particularly those with modest levels of education.”
The work permits are generally for skilled workers.
 
Isn't there always a severe shortage of experienced college grads under 40 who will work very hard and very cheap?
 
There isn’t any kind of worker shortage, skilled or otherwise. If an employer will pay enough eventually the workers will come.

Some employers would rather destroy the country by immigration than raise wages.

Immigration is causing a massive transfer of wealth from labor to capital, that is, from those who work for a living to those who live off their investments.

There’s nothing wrong with people living off their investments, just so they don’t try to live better by ruining the country for those who live by working.

Here’s a webpage that shows how immigration is affecting politics for the worse:
Cultural Marxists On Parade
 
The "skilled labor shortage" claims are based on out-of-touch management demanding excessive credentials and experience for jobs that don't really need them. For instance, if your posting for an entry-level engineering job making $50k/year requires a Master's degree and 10 years of experience (5 years with such very particular technologies that you have to have already done the exact same job before), then yeah, there's a shortage of "qualified" applicants. What's happening is that human resources departments were downsized during the "Great Recession," and the first people to go were the ones who were smart and sane enough to push back against silly "pie in the sky" requirements and wish lists coming from managers. (Management prefers yes-men and yes-women.) As a result, companies post buzzword-laden job openings where they want senior-level professionals who require essentially no on-the-job training, who not only have industry experience but have probably already worked the same job before, and who are willing to work entry-level jobs for entry-level salaries...and people wonder why new college graduates have trouble finding jobs they're "qualified" for.
 
Last edited:
The "skilled labor shortage" claims are based on out-of-touch management demanding excessive credentials and experience for jobs that don't really need them. For instance, if your posting for an entry-level engineering job making $50k/year requires a Master's degree and 10 years of experience (5 years with such very particular technologies that you have to have already done the exact same job before), then yeah, there's a shortage of "qualified" applicants. What's happening is that human resources departments were downsized during the "Great Recession," and the first people to go were the ones who were smart and sane enough to push back against silly "pie in the sky" requirements and wish lists coming from managers. (Management prefers yes-men and yes-women.) As a result, companies post buzzword-laden job openings where they want senior-level professionals who require essentially no on-the-job training, who not only have industry experience but have probably already worked the same job before, and who are willing to work entry-level jobs for entry-level salaries...and people wonder why new college graduates have trouble finding jobs they're "qualified" for.

I had a few laughs reading Dice and Monster for the NYC metro area seeing a couple of low to mid level IT type jobs posted for a low 50K/year requiring an MBA from a top tier school. I am guessing whoever posted the ridiculous requirements is just following their HR rule of posting to the outside but really have someone already in mind. When no one applies they can say we tried to recruit but since we cannot find anyone we can hire X internally or pay an H1b sponsorship they had in mind.

The market can be very deceiving to those not looking very closely at the jobs postings. Dice for example shows about 10k total jobs in the NYC metro area. Yet if you look closely 90% of the jobs posted on these sites are all recruiting agencies. If you look at the identical job descriptions you find the same position posted multiple times by different recruiting firms. It gives the appearance that there are more jobs then there actually is.
 
Last edited:
The "skilled labor shortage" claims are based on out-of-touch management demanding excessive credentials and experience for jobs that don't really need them. For instance, if your posting for an entry-level engineering job making $50k/year requires a Master's degree and 10 years of experience (5 years with such very particular technologies that you have to have already done the exact same job before), then yeah, there's a shortage of "qualified" applicants. What's happening is that human resources departments were downsized during the "Great Recession," and the first people to go were the ones who were smart and sane enough to push back against silly "pie in the sky" requirements and wish lists coming from managers. (Management prefers yes-men and yes-women.) As a result, companies post buzzword-laden job openings where they want senior-level professionals who require essentially no on-the-job training, who not only have industry experience but have probably already worked the same job before, and who are willing to work entry-level jobs for entry-level salaries...and people wonder why new college graduates have trouble finding jobs they're "qualified" for.


giphy.gif
 
As far as I have heard, the claimed labor shortage is not at the lower end of the "skill scale" but in skilled labor.


The work permits are generally for skilled workers.

As a highly skilled tech worker I call BS. Everywhere I look the skilled tech labor market is in high glut. I'm doing twice the skill level work as I was doing in the late 90's early 2k's, and only making about 70% of what I was back then. If there were a 'labor shortage' in my sector, there would be increased demand, and therefore an increase in the cost of that labor.
 
As a highly skilled tech worker I call BS. Everywhere I look the skilled tech labor market is in high glut. I'm doing twice the skill level work as I was doing in the late 90's early 2k's, and only making about 70% of what I was back then. If there were a 'labor shortage' in my sector, there would be increased demand, and therefore an increase in the cost of that labor.

Well, see, that's the problem you lazy American. Can't believe you won't work for 40%.
 
Back
Top