Amazingly, many citizens still believe that government
programs will solve all the nation’s problems.
Many politicians—both Democrat and Republican—think it’s a
great idea to provide vocational training for laid off workers. They voted for
the Workforce Investment Act. It must have looked great on paper. Who wants to
be against investment in the future of our workforce?
The act dates to the Clinton administration. According to
the New York Times:
The law
was enacted in 1998 and expanded in 2009 as part of the federal economic
stimulus package. As the economy has improved — which has led more of the
long-term unemployed to try to re-enter the labor market — training and
apprenticeships have become a central component of the Obama administration’s plan to match the unemployed with job
openings. About 21 million jobless people entered retraining in 2012.
Obviously, the word “investment” has become the preferred
euphemism for government spending.
But, if it was an investment, we should want to know how
well it has paid off.
In practice, the Times reports, the act has left people
jobless and in debt.
Here is the New York Times account of one participant in one
government program:
When
the financial crisis crippled the construction industry seven years ago, Joe
DeGrella’s contracting company failed, leaving him looking for what he hoped
would be the last job he would ever need.
He took
each step in line with the advice of the federal government: He met with an
unemployment counselor who provided him with a list of job titles the Labor
Department determined to be in high demand, he picked from among colleges that
offered government-certified job-training courses, and he received a federal
retraining grant.
In
2009, Mr. DeGrella, began a course at Daymar College —
a for-profit vocational institute in Louisville — to become a cardiology
technician. Daymar officials told him he would have a well-paying job within
weeks of graduation.
But
after about two years of studying cardiovascular physiology and the mechanics
of electrocardiograms, Mr. DeGrella, now 57, found himself jobless and $20,000
in debt. He moved into his sister’s basement and now works at an AutoZone.
Obviously, this case is anecdotal. To its credit the Times
did the hard reporting on the program. Its conclusions are not encouraging:
Instead,
an extensive analysis of the program by The New York Times shows, many
graduates wind up significantly worse off than when they started — mired in
unemployment and debt from training for positions that do not exist, and they
end up working elsewhere for minimum wage.
Split
between federal and state governments — federal officials dispense the money
and states license the training — the initiative lacks rigorous oversight by
either. It includes institutions that require thousands of hours of instruction
and charge more than the most elite private colleges. Some courses are offered
at for-profit colleges that
have committed fraud in their search for federal funding. This includes
Corinthian Colleges Inc., which reached an agreement last month with the
federal Education Department to shut down or sell many of its campuses.
The
Times examination, based on state and federal documents, school and court
records, and interviews, shows that some of the retraining institutions
advertise graduation and job-placement rates that often do not hold up to
scrutiny.
The
idea of dividing responsibility between federal and state officials was to give
local and state authorities more power in helping the unemployed in their
areas. But the unemployed who sign up for training are often left to navigate a
bureaucratic maze with almost no guidance. To avoid any appearance of
favoritism, federal job counselors are not allowed to recommend schools to job
seekers, leaving many of the unemployed to unwittingly select institutions that
are expensive, have a history of legal trouble or are academically substandard.
There
is, for example, no mechanism for students to check in with counselors to gauge
their progress or determine whether the training program is a good match.
States say they investigate complaints and audit programs with poor outcomes,
but students say they tend not to register formal complaints about a program’s
quality.
The story is long and detailed. I cannot do it justice here.
It is great journalism,
something we should always applaud.
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ReplyDeleteThe sad case of Joe DeGrella reminds me poignantly of a Clinton-era cartoon by Tom Toles (Toles was unabashedly liberal, but he had an honest antipathy toward bullshit).
In the first panel, an unemployed young man complains "all I need is a job." In the second panel, liberal do-gooder approaches an announces "what you need is job retraining! "Next panels show our young man hard at work in his apprenticeship under his mentor's careful tutelage, culminating in mentor presenting him with official certificate of retraining. Last panel shows our young man holding his certificate, saying "all I need is a job."
The government looks good on paper.
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