Talent versus Capital in the Twenty-First Century
GENEVA – When
financial policymakers attempt to promote economic growth, they almost
invariably focus on looking for new ways to unleash capital. But,
although this approach may have worked in the past, it risks giving
short shrift to the role that talent plays in generating and realizing
the ideas that make growth possible. Indeed, in a future of rapid
technological change and widespread automation, the determining factor –
or crippling limit – to innovation, competiveness, and growth is less
likely to be the availability of capital than the existence of a skilled
workforce.
Geopolitical,
demographic, and economic forces are relentlessly reshaping labor
markets. Technology, in particular, is changing the nature of work
itself, rendering entire sectors and occupations obsolete, while
creating completely new industries and job categories. By some estimates,
almost half of today’s professions could be automatable by 2025.
Speculation about what will replace them ranges from predictions of
unexpected opportunities to forecasts of large-scale unemployment as
machines displace most human labor.
The first signs of this disruption are already visible. Global unemployment has topped 212 million,
according to the International Labor Organization, and another 42
million new jobs will need to be created each year if the world economy
is to provide employment to the growing number of new entrants into the
labor market. Meanwhile, last year, 36% of employers worldwide reported facing difficulties in finding talent, the highest percentage in seven years.
Addressing this
mismatch in supply and demand will require governments, business
leaders, educational institutions, and individuals to overcome
incentives to focus on the short term and begin to plan for a future in
which change is the only constant. All must rethink what it means to
learn, the nature of work, and the roles and responsibilities of various
stakeholders in ensuring that workers around the world are able to
fulfill their potential.
Human-resource
executives at some of the world’s largest companies anticipate profound
disruptions from the increased adoption of mobile Internet and cloud
technology, the use of big data, flexible work arrangements, 3-D
printing, advanced materials, and new energy supplies, according to
early results from a survey
by the World Economic Forum. Their view of the overall impact on
employment levels in their industries was for the most part positive –
provided that new workforce skills can be developed rapidly in their own
sectors and in the labor market more broadly.
As technology
increasingly takes over knowledge-based work, the cognitive skills that
are central to today’s education systems will remain important; but
behavioral and non-cognitive skills necessary for collaboration,
innovation, and problem solving will become essential as well. Today’s
schools and universities, which are dominated by approaches to learning
that are fundamentally individualistic and competitive in nature, must
be redesigned to focus on learning to learn and acquiring the skills
needed to collaborate with others. Uniquely human skills, like being
able to work in teams, manage relationships, and understand cultural
sensitivities will become vital for businesses across all sectors and
must become a core component of future generations’ education.
Moreover, with
education increasingly becoming a lifelong pursuit, businesses must
rethink their role in providing for a competitive workforce. Some
companies have already grasped this and are investing in their
employees’ continuous learning, re-skilling, and up-skilling. Yet most
employers still expect to obtain pre-trained talent from schools,
universities, and other companies.
Business will
increasingly have to work with educators and governments to help
education systems keep up with the needs of the labor market. Given
rapid change in the skill sets required for many occupations, business
must redirect investment to on-the-job training and lifelong learning,
particularly as millennials enter the workforce, seeking purpose and
diversity of experience where their predecessors sought remuneration and
stability.
Business cycles naturally entail peaks and troughs in employment, and socially responsible businesses should follow successful examples in working toward mitigating joblessness and enhancing people’s
abilities to earn a livelihood.
Governments, too,
have a role to play in creating an environment in which their citizens
can reach their potential. Policymakers must use stronger metrics to assess human capital
and reexamine investment in education, curriculum design, hiring and
firing practices, women’s integration into the workforce, retirement
policies, immigration legislation, and welfare policies. Regulatory
support for entrepreneurship and small and medium-size enterprises
remains one of the most underused means of unleashing creativity,
enhancing growth, and generating employment.
Protecting workers
and consumers is critical, but shielding specific industries from the
impact of new business models will not hold off the next wave of
transformation. Rather than seeking to rein in disruptive businesses
such as Airbnb and Uber, governments should introduce regulations that
enable their sustained growth, while looking for ways to leverage their
technologies and entrepreneurial approaches to boost social welfare.
Such policies include online education courses for the unemployed,
digital workers’ insurance, virtual unionization, and tax policies
geared for the sharing economy.
Unlocking the world’s
latent talent, and thus its full capacity for growth, requires us to
look beyond business cycles and quarterly reports. The future is full of
potential, but only if we are smart enough – and courageous enough – to
grasp it.
Klaus Schwab is Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum.
MAY 13, 2015
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