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Education Equals Job Security

by: The Post and Courier | Editorial  |  The Post and Courier | Editorial

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A high school diploma automatically puts Americans in a better position to find employment. (Rosier / New York Daily News)

    The words "uneducated" and "unemployed" share more than a prefix. U.S. Labor Department statistics show that while the nation's overall jobless rate rose last month to 9.4 percent (the highest since 1983), it was a staggering 15.5 percent among those who haven't completed high school - and a mere 4.8 percent among those with four-year college degrees.

    You don't need a college education to detect this indisputable lesson of those numbers: The more educated you are, the less vulnerable you are to recession-related job loss.

    And the rise in unemployment apparently will continue. President Barack Obama said last week that the national jobless rate will soon eclipse 10 percent. The news for us was even worse in numbers released recently: South Carolina's jobless rate climbed to a staggering 12.1 percent.

    The recession-boosted peril of job loss for the uneducated is particularly severe among males. As The Wall Street Journal recently reported, due to the collapse of the U.S. housing market, "the male-dominated manufacturing and home-building industries are both suffering, and that has hurt less educated men far more than less educated women."

    Harvard University labor economist Lawrence Katz said that the last two recessions, in 1990-91 and 2001, were more "egalitarian" in their consequences.

    But beyond concerns over uneven gender distribution of today's unemployment pain lies the spreading realization that regardless of sex, racial, age and regional categories, more education generally equals more job security. Thanks to that enhanced, bottom-line awareness, many Americans are taking positive action to remedy their disadvantages on the schooling front.

    From the Journal: "Across the country, community colleges report record demand from students who want to quickly plug the gap in their resumĂ©s."

    That trend extends to our community, where Trident Technical College President Mary Thornley has cited the economic downturn as a factor in her school's record enrollment.

    South Carolina's leaders should keep in mind that direct link between education and economic competitiveness when setting priorities for how to spend our money. Just as a person's future can be undermined by a low level of individual education, a state's future can be undermined by a low level of collective education.

    And though it's alarming to see U.S. unemployment at record levels, at least it's encouraging to see so many Americans catching on to the modern labor-market reality that without a good education, they're highly unlikely to get - and keep - a good job.

  

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Now the uneducated will

Now the uneducated will become educated in order to get the jobs that aren't affected by the housing bubble. Then when we need houses again (or whatever they did), where will we get the uneducated workers? Illegal immigrants... and then we'll blame them for stealing our jobs, and then we'll make sure they can't get any kind of education without an SSN.

Untrue. Educated people have

Untrue. Educated people have no job security. Their jobs are being outsourced every day. And if you don't spend a fortune on new credentials and degrees every few years when your job (and job category) disappears, you will have no job. Education is no cure-all. What would make all our lives easier is to make it easy to become an entrepreneur -- with national health care and lowering barriers to entry. Then, no matter what we do -- whether we're tailors, cooks, woodworkers, teachers, accountants, plasterers -- we can make work for ourselves.

See, I have spent years

See, I have spent years reading about government. And still there are moments when all I can do, is stare open mouthed at articles I read. Education is wonderful, yes. Anyone that invests time, to better themselves, its a win win situation. BUT any politician that tries to tell you your nothing without education is a ball faced liar. America was built - off the backs of uneducated people. What people need to survive, is food, water and roof. Anything above that is a plus. There is no job security - if you have learned anything during this recession.. have you NOT learned that ? What do people want from life ? Do you want to be so buried beneath debt - that you can't enjoy the sunlight? Because that is what politicians and bankers love to advocate. Go, take out loans, educate yourself. Then when your done with school, take out MORE loans.. buy those big houses, fancy cars etc, etc. And when your old and gray.. and you look back on your life - will you wonder, how time passed by so fast. You will, have slaved away your entire life - for what ? I've watched many shows on tv, of a husband and wife, literally sobbing because they don't know what they are going to do. Huge bills, and no money coming in. That, is the travesty of all of this while bankers and big business owners, ask for people to work without pay, or they just lay off their employee's and close up shop doors . Wake up guys.