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Study: no degree, no job

Thursday, May 26, 2011
(Updated 6:03 am)

RALEIGH (MCT) -- The recession has accelerated trends already well under way in this state, giving an overwhelming employment edge to educated workers in a technology-based economy.

The N.C. Commission on Workforce Development on Wednesday painted a dire picture for the legions of middle-class workers who for much of the 20th century formed the state's economic backbone.

In a report on the state of North Carolina's workers, the commission warned that the traditional job that required no more than a basic high school education is fast disappearing in this state. Displaced workers who are not retrained will end up in low-wage jobs, if they can find employment at all.

The commission said that North Carolina's economic future depends on public officials developing smart policies. Such policies include steering more students to get marketable skills in the sciences and expanding programs that provide midlife retraining for veteran workers displaced by layoffs.

Much of this was laid out in the commission's 2007 report, but the transformation has been intensified by the recession, the new report said.

Indeed, legions of the displaced workers are not in obsolete blue-collar jobs but instead have been disgorged by the flagship employers in the intelligence-based economy. Companies like IBM, Nortel Networks, Tekelec, Sony Ericsson -- and most recently, Cisco Systems -- have collectively announced thousands of job cuts in the Triangle in the past few years, some staffing up in India and other parts of the world with cheaper labor and cheaper production.

Still, at least 42 percent of jobs being created in this state will require some education beyond a high school diploma, often in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, the commission's report says.

The best jobs in the state are going to the educated technology elites who stream into the state in search of high-paying jobs. The result is that many of the people in this state who have the best-paying jobs aren't from here.

If people keep moving here from other states at present rates, "the number of people born outside of North Carolina will surpass the number of native North Carolinians within the next three years," the report says.

That would represent a landmark shift for the state demographically, politically and culturally.

New residents are also resettling to the rural parts of the state, but these recent arrivals tend to be Hispanics who take the lowest-paying menial jobs. Many of North Carolina's rural areas would have experienced population declines if not for the arrival of Latinos who are replacing younger people who left in search of better opportunities elsewhere, like the Triangle and Charlotte. 

Comments

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igliigli

May 26, 2011 - 7:12 am EDT

Remember the UNC System has no money to pay its teachers. It has hundreds of millions for coachs.

balance

May 26, 2011 - 9:27 am EDT

Coaches are paid mostly from private funds.

terrier2003

May 27, 2011 - 12:00 pm EDT

The coaches who are paid the most are also running the teams that make the University the most money.

corisaki

May 26, 2011 - 8:24 am EDT

This is great news! The state will encourage many more to be higher educated, and then, they can join the thousands who currently hold degrees, who are unemployed! Having a degree nowadays still is not a guarantee of employment.

sportsaddict

May 26, 2011 - 11:50 am EDT

I agree, 2-degrees- B.S. and a M.Ed, currently working on a doctorate= NO JOB! I do not know what survey they have conducted or where they have found their stats, but I know what I am facing.. Day to Day job search= NO INTERVIEW, NO JOB, NO INCOME!!! Oh yea not to mention being cut off from UNEMPLOYMENT just adds to the equation!!

laserguidedloogie

May 26, 2011 - 9:42 am EDT

If they would get REAL degrees in something USEFUL it might not be so bad. Study science, engineering, medicine. Stop wasting your time with useless crap degrees like psychology, English, journalism, art (this or that).

I have seen too many people come out of college with no marketable skills and a lifetime of indentured servitude paying off onerous loan debt.

If you want to study something artsy and unmarketable that's fine, the internet makes it more possible now than ever without wasting money on college.

Just make sure that in all thy getting, thou gettest something that makes thee some flipping cash !

-Ken

copper1

May 26, 2011 - 1:58 pm EDT

You don't need a college degree to get a job.....There's plenty of work for the skilled trades...HVAC service techs, Service Plumbers, Service electricans. However these jobs require you to work in the heat...above 90, you will work in the cold....below 32.... and for the ones who are willing to get dirty, bust a knuckle, or produce a good sweat..... there is work.
Now, before you start the "oh is me" song.....BS......you have to WORK and work hard.....
Many of these jobs do offer steady work hours, many offer overtime....if you can fix or service equipment. Benefits vary with experience and just how hard you want to learn and work.
It seems that many today believe they are entitled to a six figure position, with a huge office, car expense and a two cocktail lunch hour after spending 4 years in college. Well, your college education does guarantee you a job......

HotRodLincoln

May 27, 2011 - 1:49 am EDT

Thank You...

osprey

May 26, 2011 - 11:17 pm EDT

Recession? Apparently, the Snooze and Disturber didn't get the White House/MSM memo...

We're in a "recovery!"

(Update to Webster's Dictionary: The term "recovery" now also means putting lipstick and eyeshadow on a dying economy...)

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