The Korea Times

Factory CEOs tell Trump jobs exist, skills don’t

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump brought two dozen manufactur­ing CEOs to the White House on Thursday and declared their collective commitment to restoring factory jobs lost to foreign competitio­n.

Yet some of the CEOs suggested that there were still plenty of openings for U.S. factory jobs but too few qualified people to fill them. They urged the White House to support vocational training for the high-tech skills that today’s manufactur­ers increasing­ly require — a topic Trump has seldom addressed.

“The jobs are there, but the skills are not,” one executive said during meetings with White House officials that preceded a session with the president. (Reporters were permitted to attend the meetings on the condition of not quoting individual executives by name.)

The discussion of job training and worker skills is a relatively new one for Trump, who campaigned for the White House on promises to restore manufactur­ing jobs that he said had been lost to flawed trade deals and unfair competitio­n from countries like Mexico and China.

Again and again, Trump brought up that theme in his meeting with the CEOs.

“Everything is going to be based on bringing our jobs back,” Trump said. “The good jobs, the real jobs. They’ve left.”

White House officials said Trump heard the CEOs’ concerns about a shortage of qualified workers and said he supports efforts to increase training for factory jobs. But they didn’t provide details.

“We were challenged by the president to ... come up with a program to make sure the American worker is trained for the manufactur­ing jobs of tomorrow,” Reed Cordish, a White House official, said after Thursday’s meetings.

Trump officials said the meetings were intended to provide the White House with ideas in four areas: taxes and trade; regulatory reform; infrastruc­ture; and the “workforce of the future,” including advanced training. Proposed solutions may be included in future presidenti­al executive orders or legislativ­e proposals, a White House official said.

The gathering occurred amid the same kind of jovially informal atmosphere that has prevailed in several meetings Trump has held with CEOs in the four weeks since his inaugurati­on. Most of the executives thanked the president for reaching out to them, and several expressed gratitude for his interest in meeting them face to face.

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