South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Are office careers better than skilled trade jobs?

Poll: Most Americans don’t think that’s the case

- By Clint Rainey | Fast Company

Most Americans who heard Eric Adams say recently that “low-skilled workers” lack the academic skills to “sit in a corner office” probably winced at the New York mayor’s gaffe.

That is, if the findings from a new Fast Company-Harris Poll are any indication.

Asked if pursuing a trade career is ultimately any less promising than pursuing a white-collar office job, 65% of respondent­s said no, it isn’t. Around 1,000 people participat­ed in the poll, which was conducted in December to check the pulse on national education issues. Among the respondent­s, women called trade and office jobs equally promising more than men did (70% versus 59%). Also, there were generation­al difference­s that broke down about as expected:

While 57% of 18- to 34-year-olds said trade jobs could be just as successful, it jumped to 80% for the 65-and-up crowd.

Those findings might surprise the Big Apple’s new mayor.

At a press conference on Day 4 on the job, Adams — a retired police officer — urged businesses citywide to resume in-person work at least for a couple days per week. He argued this move was necessary to “feed our financial ecosystem,” but his word choice could’ve perhaps been more elegant.

His point was seemingly that empty offices hurt New York’s economy because it relies heavily on hourly workers and other types of tradespeop­le, everyone from janitors and baristas to shoe shiners and dry cleaners. These workers cannot work remotely like the person in the corner office can, so they’re disproport­ionately hurt by office closures. Adams also added a little more context, telling CBS that critics are misconstru­ing his words: “I was a cook.

I was a dishwasher.”

Regardless of his intent, Adams’s way of putting it quickly caused a backlash.

Other findings from the poll indicate that Americans do broadly see education as a pathway to workplace success, even as it’s become more cost prohibitiv­e for many who seek it out. Seven in 10 Americans say higher education’s growing costs prevented at least one family member or friend from pursuing education beyond high school. Additional­ly, a majority of the country (72%) believes that community college should be free, and 76% agreed that student loan forgivenes­s “would have a positive impact on most Americans.”

The results from one question do demonstrat­e the uphill cultural battle aspiring tradespeop­le face, however. Despite the overwhelmi­ng support for trade careers, only 9% of those polled said they expected their child to attend any kind of technical school; 53% predicted it would be a public or private university.

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