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Which booth at the job fair?

There's an interesting debate going on at Michael Mandel's Businessweek blog. In a column last week, Mandel said the government should pour tons of money into healthcare and education because those are the only sectors that are hiring.

Mandel says:

I can easily imagine health, education, and government employment rising to 35% or more of the labor market before this downturn is over. Under the circumstances, that's not a bad thing. It does set the stage for a mammoth fiscal crisis 5 or 10 years in the future--but for now, we need all the jobs we can get.

Mandel backs up his point with a chart that shows since 1998, the only sectors with job growth are health, education and government.

But he's taking a lot of flak. One commentator writes:

I can't believe what I am reading!! Mike, you are willing to keep pumping money into health and education without any thought of making these sectors more efficient. You acknowledge this will cause a mammoth fiscal crisis 5-10 years from now, so what have we accomplished, except pushing the problems further down the road?

Others point out more issues -- health and education are non-cyclical, unlike housing for example, so they're somewhat resistant to downturns. Should we be pumping more money into sectors that are hiring instead of the ones that aren't? And don't we run the risk of making health, education and gov't even less productive (if that's possible) with over-funding? Some people would rather see money go to entrepreneurs and businesses that just need a jump to start hiring again. Retraining people to go into health and education takes a long time.

I think it's an excellent debate to be having right now, and I'd love to hear your thoughts. To say we need better health and education systems would be the understatement of the year, but I don't see how we can justify slamming money into those sectors without a serious efficiency overhaul. And good grief, how long has that been on the table?

In case you missed it, other sectors are definitely, absolutely, certainly not hiring:

I found this photo through unemploymentality.

brennan m's picture
brennan m - Mar 12, 2009

psychology, nature vs nurture octamom, jesus embryo. school for super heros, dwindling prison pop. confident civil society. Geographically content by education exchange policy. weaving a strong CONFIDENT society by science not by conspiracy and waiting for terrorism, giving undesirable would be terrorists or subliminal sympathy..., "medical options" [IVF tech] and geographic escape [normative teen exchange programs...]
health and education are our breath and creation/expetoration [cough] respectively. We can breath in evolution and breath out hope. and simply by puting ed. and intel way ahead of $$$ , avoid EVOL and DOPE.
quantified science ...can you/we handle it?

Don's picture
Don - Mar 12, 2009

Pouring more money into the healthcare system may make sense. We are going to need a fairly large number of healthcare technicians to to work on euthanizing the aging baby-boomer population. Perhaps the bright side of the current collapse of the 401K system is that it will encourage more boomers to die relatively inexpensively at work (or at home when reviewing the 401K statement) from a heart attack rather than becoming a revenue stream for the healthcare industry that makes big money from keeping zombies around for a few more weeks beyond what God has intended. Harsh? Yes, but it is time to get serious about how much money is spent trying to avoid the reaper at the end.

Don

Scott Jagow's picture
Scott Jagow - Mar 12, 2009

Easy there, Dr. Kevorkian.