Employers Aren’t Just Whining – the “Skills Gap” Is Real
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-25-2014
ISSN
0017-8012
Publisher
Harvard Business School Publishing
Language
en-US
Abstract
Every year, the Manpower Group, a human resources consultancy, conducts a worldwide “Talent Shortage Survey.” Last year, 35% of 38,000 employers reported difficulty filling jobs due to lack of available talent; in the U.S., 39% of employers did. But the idea of a “skills gap” as identified in this and other surveys has been widely criticized. Peter Cappelli asks whether these studies are just a sign of “employer whining;” Paul Krugman calls the skills gap a “zombie idea” that “that should have been killed by evidence, but refuses to die.” The New York Times asserts that it is “mostly a corporate fiction, based in part on self-interest and a misreading of government data.” According to the Times, the survey responses are an effort by executives to get “the government to take on more of the costs of training workers.”
Recommended Citation
James Bessen,
Employers Aren’t Just Whining – the “Skills Gap” Is Real
,
in
Harvard Business Review
(2014).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.bu.edu/shorter_works/186
Publisher URL
https://hbr.org/2014/08/employers-arent-just-whining-the-skills-gap-is-real