首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Last week’s disappointing unemployment report has refocused attention on the question of why, despite modest signs of economic r
Last week’s disappointing unemployment report has refocused attention on the question of why, despite modest signs of economic r
admin
2011-08-28
45
问题
Last week’s disappointing unemployment report has refocused attention on the question of why, despite modest signs of economic recovery in recent months, American companies aren’t hiring.
Indeed, some of the most puzzling stories to come out of the Great Recession are the many claims by employers that they cannot find qualified applicants to fill their jobs, despite the millions of unemployed who are seeking work. Beyond the anecdotes themselves is survey evidence, most recently from Manpower, which finds roughly half of employers reporting trouble filling their vacancies.
The first thing that makes me wonder about the supposed "skill gap" is that, when pressed for more evidence, roughly 10% of employers admit that the problem is really that the candidates they want won’t accept the positions at the wage level being offered. That’s not a skill shortage, it’s simply being unwilling to pay the going price.
But the heart of the real story about employer difficulties in hiring can be seen in the Manpower data showing that only 15% of employers who say they see a skill shortage say that the issue is a lack of candidate knowledge, which is what we’d normally think of as skill. Instead, by far the most important shortfall they see in candidates is a lack of experience doing similar jobs. Employers are not looking to hire entry-level applicants right out of school. They want experienced candidates who can contribute immediately with no training or start-up time. That’s certainly understandable, but the only people who can do that are those who have done virtually the same job before, and that often requires a skill set that, in a rapidly changing world, may die out soon after it is perfected.
One of my favorite examples of the absurdity of this requirement was a job advertisement for a cotton candy machine operator—not a high-skill job—which required that applicants "demonstrate prior success in operating cotton candy machines." The most perverse manifestation of this approach is the many employers who now refuse to take applicants from unemployed candidates, the rationale being that their skills must be getting rusty.
Another way to describe the above situation is that employers don’t want to provide any training for new hires—or even any time for candidates to get up to speed. A 2011 Accenture survey found that only 21% of U.S. employees had received any employer-provided formal training in the past five years. Does it make sense to keep vacancies unfilled for months to avoid having to give new hires with less-than-perfect skills time to get up to speed?
Employers further complicated the hiring process by piling on more and more job requirements, expecting that in a down market a perfect candidate will turn up if they just keep looking. One job seeker I interviewed in my own research described her experience trying to land "one post that has gone unfilled for nearly a year, asking the candidate to not only be the human resources expert but the marketing, publishing, project manager, accounting and finance expert. When I asked the employer if it was difficult to fill the position, the response was ’yes but we want the right fit’."
Another factor that contributes to the perception of a skills gap is that most employers now use software to handle job applications, adding rigidity to the process that screens out all but the theoretically perfect candidate. Most systems, for example, now ask potential applicants what wage they are seeking—and toss out those who put down a figure higher than the employer wants. That’s hardly a skill problem. Meanwhile, applicants are typically assessed almost entirely on prior experience and credentials, and a failure to meet any one of the requirements leads to elimination. One manager told me that in his company 25,000 applicants had applied for a standard engineering job, yet none were rated as qualified. How could that be? Just put in enough of these yes/no requirements and it becomes mathematically unlikely that anyone will get through.
What do we do about this situation, where jobs are going unfilled while good candidates are out there? For starters, employers should ask themselves whether their current practices are truly working for them. Then they need to ask: wouldn’t we be better off helping good candidates complete the requirements to be a perfect fit rather than keeping positions open indefinitely?
A generation ago, employers routinely hired people right out of school and were willing to provide almost all their skills. Apprenticeships and similar programs provided ways for the employees to essentially pay for the training themselves. Employers—and especially those who expect colleges to provide most of their skills—should also work more closely with educational institutions to develop the candidates they need.
It makes no sense to expect that a supplier will produce what you want if you give it no advanced warning of what that might be and no help developing it. But the first step is to recognize that this problem is self-inflicted.
From The Times, June 4, 2012
What’s the author’s attitude toward the job advertisement for a cotton candy machine operator - not a high-skill job - which required that applicants "demonstrate prior success in operating cotton candy machines?
选项
A、Positive.
B、Critical.
C、Skeptical.
D、Indifferent.
答案
B
解析
本题为推理题。文中第五段写到One of my favorite examples of the absurdity of this requirement was…由此可以看出作者持批判态度,认为有这些要求是荒谬的,因此选B。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/zlYO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
A、Therearefiveorsixgroupsineachclass.B、Thereare30to40childrenineachclass.C、Therearefiveorsixchildrenine
Countriesatalllevelsofeconomicdevelopmentfaceasimilarchallenge:tomaketheirindustriescompetitiveinanincreasingl
SpeechacttheorywasoriginatedwiththeBritishphilosopher______inthelate1950s.
WhosemasterpieceTheGreatGatsbymadehimoneofthegreatestAmericannovelists?
APolishproverbclaimsthatfish,totasteright,shouldthreetimes—inwater,inbutterandinwine.Theearlyeffortsofthe
HowDotheMoviesDoIt?Haveyoueverseenmoviesinwhichabuildingwasburneddownorabridgewasdestroyed?Haveyouse
TheVictorianAge,theheightoftheBritishEmpire,coveredtheyears______.
SomehearteningstatisticswerereportedlastyearbytheJournaloftheNationalCancerInstitute:themortalityrateforbreas
InthedaysbeforeDianabecameaccustomedtodailyhairdressers,highfashionandexpertlyappliedmakeup,shelookedherbest
InthedaysbeforeDianabecameaccustomedtodailyhairdressers,highfashionandexpertlyappliedmakeup,shelookedherbest
随机试题
下列烧伤创面清创方法哪一项是错误的()
要对两个率比较时
下列选项指的是雷尼替丁抑制胃酸分泌的机制是()
[背景资料]某水利枢纽工程由混凝土重力坝、水电站等建筑物构成。施工单位与项目法人签订了其中某坝段的施工承包合同,部分合同条款如下:合同总金额壹亿伍仟万元,开工日期为2013年9月20日,总工期26个月。开工前项目法人向施工单位支付10%的工程预付款,
风形成的直接原因是()。
_____目前对于地球磁场的变化和倒转提出了不少理论和模型,_____基本上都处在假设和推测的阶段,并没有一个十分成熟的理论。
全面深化改革是决定当代命运的关键,习近平总书记围绕全面深化改革作出了一系列论述。下列说法错误的是:
一列客车长250m,一列货车长350m,在平行的轨道上相向行驶,从两车头相遇到两车尾相离经过15s,已知客车与货车的速度之比是5:3,则两车的速度相差().
YouwillhearaninterviewonCEORobertMcDonald,talkingaboutthenatureandprogressofthecompany’sdigitisationinitiativ
Afterintensiveresearch,scientistshaveconcludedthatpoliticianslie.InastudydescribedinBritain’sObservernewspap
最新回复
(
0
)