David DeLong
 
DELONG REPORT-APRIL 2016

Apr 19, 2016
The U.S. Occupations at Greatest Risk of a Labor Shortage - Real Time Economics - WSJ
The U.S. is at risk of running out of occupational therapists, railroad engineers, mathematicians, machinists and other workers, potentially leaving the economy in a long-term slump.

“In the next 10 to 15 years, we expect U.S. employers to demand more labor than will be available, which will, in turn, constrain overall economic growth,” the Conference Board said in a report to be released Tuesday.

It may seem premature to talk about [More]
DAVID
This is a great overview of the evolving labor shortage in particular fields. It also discusses the many conflicting factors that are shaping and confusing the evolving picture of the labor supply in highly-skilled areas. The case can increasingly be made that shortages in specific fields, such as airline pilots, machinists, and nurses are having significant economic impacts in certain parts of the country.
Apr 01, 2016
Tufts Medical Center recruits college grads as nurses’ aides - The Boston Globe
What’s a philosophy-biology double major doing changing bed pans?

For Breeze Victor, a 23-year-old graduate of Bucknell University, working as a nursing assistant at Tufts Medical Center — and all of the unglamorous duties that come with it — is helping him figure out what he wants to do with his life. It’s not research or teaching, as he thought when he started college; it’s becoming a nurse anesthetist.

Tufts recently launched a p [More]
DAVID
Are you a health care organization looking to address a critical skills shortage? This article reports on a creative program at Tufts Medical Center to fill the shortage of nursing assistants. But it raises as many questions as it answers. Why do recent college grads need to take these low-level jobs to launch their careers? Are colleges ignoring the fact that their students don't have enough job experience when they graduate? What does this new path to a career say about how the work world has changed? What is the impact of this program on less educated folks who might have filled these jobs in the past? What does this program say about the upskilling of work in general? I am not critical of the program. I think it is very creative, and seems like a win for the hospital and the new grads. But it does raise questions about the changing world of work.
Mar 21, 2016
Career Advice No One Tells You — Life Learning — Medium
Most people have “okay” jobs.

We go to work, do what we have to do from 9 to 5, come back home, maybe hang out with friends, and do it all over again the next day.

There’s nothing wrong with this.

But some people perform at a totally different level.

They’re the people who land executive level positions by their early 30s while everyone else is still trying to “work their way up.”

They’re the people who jump out [More]
DAVID
This post is full of very wise career advice that is not your standard stuff. I definitely would definitely recommend it for Millennials early in their career. For example, if the choice is between a higher salary or a better mentor, ALWAYS take the mentor. It will pay off much better in the long run.
Mar 20, 2016
Calculate Your Economic Risk - The New York Times
TWO economic issues loom especially large in the United States today: widespread economic insecurity and soaring levels of income inequality. These are not just issues of interest to academics and policy makers; they are a prime concern of ordinary citizens. “How much economic risk do I face in the future?” you may wonder. “How does my risk differ from that of others?”

Plenty of professors, including ourselves, analyze economic risk and pu [More]
DAVID
What is your risk of experiencing poverty? It's almost nil if you are 45-49, white, married with more than a high school education. But it is 75% if you are 25-29, non-white, unmarried with only a high school education. This is one reason we must train all young people in the realities of the changing labor market and what it takes to get and keep a "good" job.
Feb 14, 2016
The 24/7 Work Culture’s Toll on Families and Gender Equality - The New York Times
The biggest obstacle to women in joining the highest ranks of the business world is a lack of family-friendly policies. That, at least, has been the conventional wisdom in recent years, and it has been embraced by progressive companies that offer flexible schedules or allow people to work from home.

But some researchers are now arguing that the real problem is not the lack of family-friendly policies for mothers, but the surge in hours wor [More]
DAVID
The findings of this research make a lot of sense. I continue to wonder how many unsustainable roles we've created in organizations today, jobs that people just can't continue doing for years without serious impacts on physical and mental health, not to mention family life.
Mar 21, 2016
A lesson in rebuilding - The Boston Globe
WATERVILLE, Maine — Vacancies outnumber tenants on Main Street. Graffiti mars the brick and stone on once-proud Victorian buildings. And much of the traffic, which used to teem with shoppers, barrels through downtown on its way to someplace else.

Mayor Nick Isgro does not pinpoint a specific date when Waterville hit bottom. Instead, he said, this blue-collar city has been near there for 20 years, a casualty of the job drain that has ravage [More]
DAVID
This is an interesting story of how one college, Colby, located in a rural setting is trying to invest in rebuilding the economy of its home town. Colby's president recognizes that this investment is good for the college in many ways. In working with liberal arts college presidents, I am finding that the solution to their challenges recruiting students and preparing them for viable careers is very context dependent. Each school is going to need to react to the changing marketplace differently.
Feb 26, 2016
Robots will take your job - The Boston Globe
On Dec. 2, 1942, a team of scientists led by Enrico Fermi came back from lunch and watched as humanity created the first self-sustaining nuclear reaction inside a pile of bricks and wood underneath a football field at the University of Chicago. Known to history as Chicago Pile-1, it was celebrated in silence with a single bottle of Chianti, for those who were there understood exactly what it meant for humankind, without any need for words.
[More]
DAVID
This article shows why the job market and potential careers are going to change so dramatically in the next decade. Even if you think the author's claims of artificial intelligence creating massive unemployment are overblown, the impact is still going to be very big. This is one reason why I am so committed to helping young people launch their careers effectively. And the rise of AI is another reason aging workers need to be concerned about their continued employability.
Mar 18, 2016
Work in the Future Will Fall into These 4 Categories
Organizations are more boundary-less, agile, global, and transparent — and will be even more so in the future. Work and workers (yes, humans) will always be essential to organizations, but organizations themselves will be more diverse, and work will be organized, structured, and done in new ways, increasingly through arrangements outside of regular full-time employment. How can leaders navigate this new digital work ecosystem? How should your org [More]
DAVID
The author of this post is leading thinker on trends in workforce development. I pay special attention to his ideas about where work and skill development are headed.
Feb 17, 2016
Baby boomer retirements may slow Mass. economic growth - The Boston Globe
The biggest hurdle to the state’s economic growth isn’t a slowing Chinese economy, collapsing oil prices, or gyrating financial markets. It’s your graying co-worker.

The long-predicted wave of baby boomer retirements — delayed by the recession of 2007-2009 — is beginning to hit companies in Massachusetts and across the nation, leaving employers scrambling to find replacements for their departing sixtysomething workers.

The oldest of [More]
DAVID
This article provides latest details of how the aging workforce is impacting one state's economic growth. This pattern is going to repeat around the country. An interesting point in this article is how the demographics in the Boston area are considerably different (much younger) than in the rest of the state.
Feb 14, 2016
Why Students With Smallest Debts Have the Larger Problem - The New York Times
Politicians who complain about college costs frequently cite two numbers: one trillion and seven million. Student borrowers owe more than $1 trillion, and seven million borrowers are in default, according to the latest Department of Education data.

It’s natural for people listening to the politicians to connect the two facts with a causal arrow: More debt leads to more default. But the reality is surprising: Borrowers who owe the most are [More]
DAVID
This is a useful article that shows out counter-intuitive thinking about student debt. The real problem is with those students who start college, borrow some money and then drop out. Not the big borrowing medical school or business school students who are likely to take on big debt, but have a big payoff later on. What the article doesn't address is those fields where grad students have to take on considerable debt -- like veterinary school or social work -- where salaries continue to shrink. Bottom line is student debt is a complex problem -- not all bad. But the most important thing is that potential grad students do their homework in detail about the real salaries being earned in their fields before investing in those advanced degrees.
Mar 31, 2016
Interim school chiefs in high demand - The Boston Globe
Communities across the state are struggling to find administrators to lead their public school systems, spurring some to hire retired superintendents — who can collect windfalls worth tens of thousands of dollars.

About one-fifth of the state’s 275 superintendents leave or retire each year, and there is a shrinking pool of qualified applicants to replace them. This year alone, eight formerly retired superintendents are leading school distr [More]
DAVID
If ever there was an example of a growing example of leadership skills shortages, this job is it. Who the hell wants to be a superintendent of schools?? It is a politically charged job that requires all kinds of relatively sophisticated skills. This problem is only going to get worse for troubled school districts.
Jan 29, 2016
Synthesis: Generations United - HBR-JanFeb-2016.pdf
n 1971, HBR asked 3,000 readers what they thought of the following
scenario: A capable young manager in a financial services company returns from a month’s vacation. Formerly clean cut and conservatively dressed, he’s now sporting a beard and long
sideburns. He also begins appearing at work in bright-colored sport-shirts and bell-bottom trousers. He resumes working with his accustomed vigor and sincerity.
Given a list of potential resp [More]
DAVID
Argues that the generations aren't that different.
Jan 19, 2016
How Demographics Rule the Global Economy - WSJ
Ever since the global financial crisis, economists have groped for reasons to explain why growth in the U.S. and abroad has repeatedly disappointed, citing everything from fiscal austerity to the euro meltdown. They are now coming to realize that one of the stiffest headwinds is also one of the hardest to overcome: demographics.
DAVID
This is a great graphic illustration of changing global population demographics and its implications for changing workforce.
Jan 28, 2016
The Global Skills Gap Widens as U.S. Students Struggle - Bloomberg Business
The weekly journal Science features on its new cover a Babylonian tablet that calculates Jupiter's movement through the sky. The archeological find pushes the discovery of a rudimentary calculus back at least 1,400 years, from 14th century Europe.

Advisers to Babylonian kings were recording two facts—the passage of time and Jupiter's velocity—to project where the giant gas orb might pop up next. A more sophisticated version of t [More]
DAVID
More details of how the US education system matches up globally and what skills gaps look like in terms of an education gap. How can our kids be doing so poorly in math and reading?
Jan 19, 2016
What is it like to be poor at an Ivy League school? - The Boston Globe
High-achieving, low-income students, often the first in their families to attend college, struggle to feel they belong on elite campuses.
DAVID
Nationwide only 11% of low income students who start a B.A. program actually finish college. This article paints an in-depth picture of what it is like to be poor in an Ivy League school. Despite the benefits of a full scholarship, these students are faced with an amazing set of obstacles. It is interesting to see how even schools like Harvard and Brown, with all their resources, are struggling to help these kids fit in and eventually succeed. Imagine what it's like for a kid at a much less well-funded institution.
Jan 19, 2016
Why Didn't Higher Education Protect Hispanic and Black Wealth?
College-educated families usually earn significantly higher incomes and accumulate more wealth than families headed by someone who does not have a four-year college degree. The income- and wealth-boosting effects of education apply within all racial and ethnic groups. Higher education may also help "protect" wealth, buffering families against major economic and financial shocks and mitigating adverse long-term trends. Based on two decades of deta [More]
DAVID
Here's a mind blower. We tend to think that a college education is a great provider of economic security. But recent research from the St. Louis Fed shows that Hispanic and black college graduates have actually faired worse than non-college educated families during recent economic downturns. To me this suggests that a college degree is not enough in the new job market. Many First-Gens need even more support in career development. This squares with the findings of a book I've been reading "Paying for the Party: How College Maintains Inequality." Highly recommended.
Jan 19, 2016
Building a 21st Century Learning Ecosystem
This vendor white paper speaks to the challenges of creating learning programs that are matched to the 21st century mind, which is fragmented, has short time span and has to learn a ton. Interesting challenges which I have seen with my other clients.
FILES
Building a 21st Century Learning Ecosystem
Jan 19, 2016
Gifts, Debts, and Inheritances: Why So Many Minority Millennials Can't Get Ahead - The Atlantic
Without the financial support that many white families can provide, minority young people have to continually make sacrifices that set them back.
DAVID
This article makes a strong case for why it is so hard for working class and lower middle class students and grads to achieve upward mobility, despite a college education. In reality, the career opportunities for young people with limited economic resources are much more constrained than for peers who come from families with more resources and connections. For more evidence of this, see the book "Paying for the Party: How College Maintains Inequality."
Mar 21, 2016
What Happens When Millennials Run the Workplace? - The New York Times
Joel Pavelski, 27, isn’t the first person who has lied to his boss to scam some time off work.

But inventing a friend’s funeral, when in fact he was building a treehouse — then blogging and tweeting about it to be sure everyone at the office noticed? That feels new.

Such was a recent management challenge at Mic, a five-year-old website in New York that is vying to become a leading news source created by and for millennials. Recent h [More]
DAVID
This article strikes me as misleading in that it describes a Millennial-run business that is an incredibly small part of the work world. It is a non-tech, knowledge-intensive business in a shrinking industry --- journalism -- targetted at Millennials. Nevertheless, the article provides some interesting insights into human nature and the challenges of management, no matter what the generation.
Jan 19, 2016
Parents’ Fears Confirmed: Liberal Arts Students Earn Less - WSJ
For the first time, government data back up what some parents have long suspected: Students who choose elite liberal arts colleges don’t earn as much money early in their careers as those who attend highly selective research universities.

The disparity, determined by a Wall Street Journal analysis of the data, means that some liberal arts colleges may face tough questions about the potential payoff of their expensive tuition. That may be e [More]
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