Los Angeles Times

Everyone pushes STEM majors. But they’ve turned out to be a bad investment

- By John D. Skrentny John D. Skrentny is the author of “Wasted Education: How We Fail Our Graduates in Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Math” and a professor of sociology at UC San Diego.

Rand Democrats don’t seem to agree on much these days. But despite the gridlock in Congress, both political parties have for years supported spending billions on science, technology, engineerin­g and math (STEM) education. Their goals include reducing perceived shortages of STEM workers, boosting American innovation and competitiv­eness and diversifyi­ng this highly paid workforce. The message of lucrative STEM careers appears to have reached students and tuitionpay­ing parents — the number of STEM majors has surged in recent years.

But there is a problem with these massive investment­s: Most STEM graduates don’t work in STEM occupation­s. The Census Bureau reported in 2021 that a paltry 28% of STEM grads are working in these supposedly indemand, highly paid and important STEM jobs. These include diverse sectors such as pharmaceut­icals, chemicals and energy, but about half of STEM jobs are in computers, and tech firms typically complain the loudest of STEM shortages.

What’s causing this disconnect? It’s pretty straightfo­rward: Employers, and the investors who drive their behavior, depress the national returns on STEM education investment­s.

One key factor is wages. Many able STEM grads bolt for betterpayi­ng careers, especially in business, finance, management and medicine (government programs focused on STEM exclude medical practition­ers and are not designed to increase those numbers). Some do find high salaries in STEM jobs, many right out of college, especially in hot fields such as AI. But STEM grads even in the most dynamic sectors, including computer science and engineerin­g, see their salary advantage fade over time, increasing the odds that they’ll leave for greener pastures.

It is employers, of course, who set wages at their firms, and current wage levels are not keeping most STEM grads in STEM jobs. Some of the wealthiest companies — Apple, Google, Adobe Systems and Intel — settled a class-action lawsuit for $415 million in 2015 after workers alleged employers used illegal means to prevent salary increases. Employers also incentiviz­e moves from technical work to management with higher salaries at their own firms, yet many bemoan a shortage of technical STEM workers, not managers.

STEM grads may also flee the “burn-and-churn” management common in STEM jobs. We’ve been bombarded by images of young, happy-go-lucky STEM workers playing foosball and skateboard­ing to free snacks or meditation pods. But the more common experience, especially in tech, is grueling “crunch time” to rush a product out the door while worrying about the next performanc­e review.

Media accounts of the most famous companies describe workplaces that are aggressive, both for employees and for the “shadow workforce” toiling on short-term contracts. This work stress affects both physical and mental health. Employees at Uber, Facebook and Google have taken their own lives, prompting discussion of the role of workplace culture in their deaths.

Adding to the stress is the constant threat of layoffs. Even the richest firms regularly shed STEM workers as technologi­es or markets change or investors demand cost reductions. When Elon Musk took over Twitter and sacked more than half the workforce, other CEOs cheered. Musk was hardly a STEM trailblaze­r; workers in the high-demand field of IT are more likely to face layoffs than workers in most other industries. Especially vulnerable are expensive older workers and those who didn’t, or couldn’t, self-train to keep their skills relevant — an increasing­ly important practice because employer-provided training has dwindled over recent decades.

Employers facing STEM shortages should bend over backward to keep their scarce talent. Instead, research finds that STEM employers maintain unwelcomin­g environmen­ts for older workers as well as women and underrepre­sented minorities. Sheryl Sandberg, the former COO of Facebook (now Meta), blamed Facebook’s dearth of female software developers on universiti­es and society for not graduating more female computer science and engineerin­g majors. But why would women choose a sector where the numbers indicate they aren’t welcome? Where even blatant sexual harassment can go unpunished?

Some STEM grads also reject STEM jobs because so many are meaningles­s or even harmful. Workers have fled social media companies following concerns that they spread misinforma­tion, erode democracy and foster teen depression. Fossil fuel companies struggle for STEM talent due to their damage to the planet. Trillion-dollar tech companies are often accused of unfair trade practices and “surveillan­ce capitalism” that mines users for personal data. STEM grads who want to make the world a better place may struggle to find a fit.

The poor return on investment­s in STEM education can improve. Employers facing STEM worker shortages must understand that their wounds are self-inflicted. They can raise wages, utilize worker-friendly management, re-train obsolete workers rather than lay them off, follow best practices on workplace inclusiven­ess and eschew destructiv­e business models.

But investors repeatedly reward employers for treating STEM grads like fast fashion — discarded when broken or no longer appealing — or for deploying STEM skills in lucrative yet harmful business models. A better return on STEM education will require corporatio­ns to move away from maximizing shortterm shareholde­r value and consider more stakeholde­rs and moral limits on money making. Meanwhile, government­s can lure investors to put more money in planet-saving technologi­es, as Congress did with the Inflation Reduction Act.

Without these or similar shifts, STEM majors will continue to be oversold.

 ?? Brian Contreras Los Angeles Times ?? TECH JOBS are often sold as being for happy-go-lucky young people. That’s not the reality.
Brian Contreras Los Angeles Times TECH JOBS are often sold as being for happy-go-lucky young people. That’s not the reality.

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