Mike Rowe says there are a lot of people who don’t get into the trades

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Mike Rowe says there are a lot of people who don’t get into the trades

“There are two million AI-proof six-figure jobs open right now,” said Mike Rowe. “And people aren’t trained for them.”

The most famous TV host Dirty jobs Talked with recently The Wall Street JournalIn an interview for its Free Speech newsletter (1), he calls out the growing skills crisis in the American workforce.

Rowe says that if industries can’t find enough skilled workers to run critical infrastructure and manufacturing, the country could be headed for what he describes as an “existentially-threatening bellwether.”

Meanwhile, artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping white-collar careers and forcing workers to rethink what a “good job” looks like.

Rowe says there are millions of open roles that don’t require a four-year degree, especially in manufacturing, construction and other skilled trades.

Figures from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (2) (BLS) report that the US economy has lost millions of jobs, including millions in manufacturing alone.

So where are all the workers?

Industries such as manufacturing are facing a demographic squeeze, with many skilled workers aging out of the workforce and fewer young people entering the trades.

According to the Associated Builders and Contractors (3), the U.S. construction sector alone needs more than half a million workers by 2024 to keep up with demand.

Rowe argues that part of the problem comes from decades of messages about education and career options, saying, “When we took shop class out of high school 40, 50 years ago, we sent a clear message to parents and kids that those jobs weren’t even worth looking at. At the same time, we pushed four-year degrees too hard.”

According to McKinsey & Company (4), it is this cultural stigma that still seems to hold many young people back. In a survey of 1,000 Americans ages 18 to 20, nearly three-quarters said they still have negative views about choosing a trade school over a traditional four-year college.

Young people have traditionally been encouraged to pursue college degrees, one result of which is that the US now has approximately $1.7 trillion in student loan debt (5), according to a report by the Federal Reserve Board.

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