National Data | "Skills Shortage" — Or Immigration Overreach?

By Edwin S. Rubenstein

11/10/2005

From Gates to Greenspan, business leaders say a mismatch between the skills of American workers and the needs of employers puts our ability to compete internationally at risk. And the growing U.S. income inequality is often blamed on this shortage of skilled workers and a glut of incompetents.

But University of Wisconsin sociologist Michael J. Handel begs to disagree. In his new book Worker Skills and Job Requirements: Is There a Mismatch?, he offers proof that American workers are as competent as those in other advanced nations.

Native-born Americans are, that is.

The apparent relative weakness in U.S. average cognitive skills vanishes when the effects of immigration are netted out. Handel points to the International Adult Literacy Survey (IALS), a test administered to working-age adults in 14 advanced industrialized countries between 1994 and 1998. The U.S. ranked 10th place overall, but our poorest performers (5th percentile) were dead last and our best performers (95th percentile) were 3rd highest. [Table 1.] The U.S. gap between top and bottom was the widest of all the countries surveyed.

Hendel cites studies showing this result is primarily the result of mass immigration. For example:

Three points spring out from Hendel’s research.

Curiously, Handel’s publisher, the Economic Policy Institute, is a liberal operation that specializes in blanket defenses of (unionized) labor while doing its politically-correct best to ignore immigration’s impact.

Does EPI realize the implications of Hendel’s work? (Ask them.) Does he? (Ask him.)

Edwin S. Rubenstein is President of ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.

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