There are a lot of
reasons why Germany has done better than the United States in the tepid recovery
following the Great Recession but one of the most important is the difference
in attitude in the two countries towards the labor force. In the United States companies regard
manufacturing workers as the enemy. For
them a skilled work force is something that reduces profit, and a cost to be
minimized. Few things make manufacturing
executives happier than firing workers (Mitt Romney was quoted somewhat out of
context when he said he like’s firing people, but not completely).
German manufacturing
companies view the labor force in a different light. To them skilled labor is a resource to be
cultivated, maintained and protected.
They recognize that companies spend huge sums to create a skilled work
force and that terminating those workers when there is cost pressure is not the
right strategy in the long term.
In
Germany ,
nearly two-thirds of the country's workers are trained through partnerships
among companies, technical schools and trade guilds. Last year, German
companies took on and trained nearly 600,000 paid apprentices. The schools
provide theoretical lessons on the side, while trade unions help ensure
training is standardized.
When the Great
Recession came German companies partnered with labor unions and the
government to produce policies and government subsidies to keep workers on the
payroll. This kept personal income from falling, shortened the Great Recession
and when demand for German manufacturing products increased in the recovery,
German manufacturers were ready and able to meet demand with quality products.
The good news in all
of this is that German companies are exporting
this philosophy to their manufacturing units in the United States .
Volkswagen, whose auto
factory will graduate its first class of U.S. apprentices next year, is one of
dozens of companies introducing training that combine German-style
apprenticeships and vocational schooling.
And it’s not like this isn’t needed.
Though
unemployment remains stuck above 8%, companies can't find enough machinists,
robotics specialists and other highly skilled workers to maintain their factory
floors. An estimated 600,000 skilled, middle-class manufacturing jobs remain
unfilled nationwide, even as millions of Americans search for work.
But it is not clear if this philosophy and attitude
will carry over the U. S.
companies. See it involves using, gasp,
government, primarily in the form of coordinating training with community
colleges and high schools. But there is
some hope.
In
the U.S. ,
such close cooperation doesn't often exist. Another stumbling block has been
companies' fear of spending on training, only to see apprentices go elsewhere.
Siemens spends approximately $165,000 an apprentice in its new three-year
mechatronics training program in Charlotte ,
N.C.
But
where apprenticeship programs are reaching a critical mass, U.S. companies have joined. At Central Piedmont
Community College in Charlotte , where some 200 German firms have
nearby operations, 18 companies participate in company-tailored apprentice
partnerships. Most are European, but a few, such as U.S. bearings maker Timken Co.,TKR +2.51% also
take part.
If it could be adopted by U. S. companies, if executive
could change their attitudes and quit looking at workers and unions as enemies
and costs then maybe they could get this type of program and results.
Its
apprenticeship program is a backup plan to ensure it has enough skilled workers
for future plant expansions. About two dozen students join the program each
year, then toggle between on-site classroom and on-the job training, while
getting paid a starting $10 an hour.
One
recruit was 28-year-old Brian Burton, who joined the program last year. When
they graduate in 2014, he and his brother Mark will have Volkswagen job
offers—likely in skilled maintenance jobs starting at $22 an hour—as well as
technical diplomas from Chattanooga State Community College. "It's not an
education we can get anywhere else," Mr. Burton said.
No Brian doesn’t look like a cost to most of us, he
looks like a valuable resource. Too bad
narrow minded corporate executives cannot see it that way.
Great article, indeed. Keep at it please TDPE. As you know this country is its own worst enemy!
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