The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Future of work calls for new thinking

Donald Trump won the U.S. presidency in large part on a promise to help American workers displaced by trade and technology. That’s a worthy goal — but if he wants to deliver, he’ll have to rethink his approach. Above all, he’ll need to recognize that the

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To date, Trump has focused narrowly on industries such as mining and manufactur­ing — for example, by loosening environmen­tal regulation­s on coal producers and by haranguing automakers in an attempt to keep jobs in the U.S. These efforts are woefully misdirecte­d, and not just because technologi­cal progress and global competitio­n should be embraced and not blocked. It’s also a matter of scale. Today, goods-producing industries have far fewer jobs at risk than the vastly larger services sector.

As a new Bloomberg analysis demonstrat­es, businesses such as department stores and landline telecommun­ications have recently become the biggest job losers among 350 subsectors of the economy. To be sure, overall employment in services has gone up since Trump won the election last November, but the effect of job displaceme­nt on many individual industries and their workers has been severe.

The coming decades may be even more disruptive. Artificial intelligen­ce is threatenin­g new swathes of the labor force. Researcher­s at the University of Oxford estimate that nearly half of all U.S. jobs — about 69 million — are vulnerable, particular­ly such low-wage occupation­s as office clerks, food servers and cashiers.

Such projection­s are speculativ­e, and it’s impossible to say exactly how technologi­cal change will affect the workforce. But even if the losses are smaller than the scariest estimates — and even if new, asyet-unimagined occupation­s arise to take up the slack — millions will face the huge task of adjusting. They will have to find new careers, learn new skills, and move to where their labor is in demand.

The U.S. is ill-prepared for this challenge. The main government retraining program, Trade Adjustment Assistance, focuses on manufactur­ing jobs that have shifted overseas or succumbed to foreign competitio­n. That’s far too narrow. And little is being done to attack the other obstacles that make it harder for workers to switch jobs: the difficulty of moving without losing government benefits, zoning rules that make it hard for low-income workers to find affordable homes, occupation­al licensing that’s needlessly strict, and more.

The U.S. needs to furnish opportunit­ies for retraining to all who lose a job through no fault of their own. Every level of government should cooperate with employers to create more ambitious and effective apprentice­ship programs. Benefits should be more portable and other barriers to mobility — geographic and occupation­al — should be urgently identified and removed.

The future of jobs needs to be a much higher priority — and the president and Congress need to think a lot bigger.

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 ?? ALAN DIAZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A builder works on a condominiu­m project in Coral Gables, Fla.
ALAN DIAZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A builder works on a condominiu­m project in Coral Gables, Fla.

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