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The 2010 Meltdown Solving the Impending Jobs Crisis
Book Code: C8436
ISBN: 0-275-98436-2
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-98436-6
288 pages, figures; tables
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 9/30/2005
List Price: $41.95 (UK Sterling Price: £24.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Related Web Pages: Awards:
  • ACTE Book of the Month March 2007
Reviews:
  • Gordon, business and education consultant, challenges policy makers to address the anticipated shortage of highly educated and technically trained workers, which he attributes in large part to technology growth, globalization, and baby-boomer retirements. He describes a cultural lag that has led to "techno-peasants" who drop out of high school, have outdated career skills, and seem destined for low-paying jobs, and a business environment that focuses too much on short-term profits, outsourcing, and importing temporary workers. To produce a more educated and technically skilled workforce, he recommends a cultural change in which parents are more involved in their children's education. He also discusses how community involvement in education can be enhanced with the development of NGOs that involve businesses in local community organizations such as chambers of commerce and service clubs to guide students to new careers. A wide variety of schools such as the Fargo Skills and Technology Training Center and corporations such as Hewlett-Packard have aided technical education. The book includes numerous examples of education programs and tables comparing American education to that of other countries. See also Gordon's Literacy in America (CH, Oct'03, 41-1049), coauthored with Elaine Gordon. The 2010 Meltdown is especially useful for business professionals, policy makers, and educators. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduate through professional collections.
    —Choice
    March 2006
  • The book made me THINK about how we as Canadians are preparing, on NOT preparing, for the inevitable....It was one of the best books I have read lately to help explain why the War for Talent is imminent.
    —Canadian Career Information Association
    November 2005
  • In this thought-provoking book, Gordon lays out the critical situation employers will face - do face - in finding and holding employees who have the education and training to get the job done....Recommended for business leaders, educators, human resource professionals, politicians, and enlightened citizens who are dedicated to making a difference for the generations that will follow us.
    —Midwest Book Review
    2007
  • Whether you work in a business, service sector, nonprofit organization, governmental agency or school setting, Gordon's book prompts critical thinking about where we are headed and what we need to be both discussing and taking action upon in order to prevent a 2010 meltdown of our workforce and our economy....Read The 2010 Meltdown: Solving the Impending Jobs Crisis....[t]o gather ideas for solving the impending crisis in filling jobs of all kinds.
    —Idaho Press - Tribune
    April 2, 2006
  • You can benefit from reading The 2010 Meltdown....Gordon admonishes U.S. businesses for slashing their training budgets when times are tough. Executive development, sales training, advanced technical training and continuing professional education are still being offered, but only for 25% of the work force.
    Gordon challenges readers to change what he calls an antiquated American culture that divides most of the work force into two worlds: white-collar managers and professionals who are in the upper and middle classes, and blue-collar manual laborers who mostly remain in the lower class.
    Despite some of the bleak findings and comments, Gordon's book is hopeful. He calls for action to avoid a major meltdown in our work force and describes model programs involving partnerships between educators, employers and community organizations that pave the way for others who want to work for change.
    —The Milwaukee Sentinel
    January 15, 2006
  • Ed Gordon, a business author whose books are filled with examples, illustrations, and explanations that flow from extensive research, has done it again. In this thought-provoking book, Gordon lays out the critical situation employers will face - do face - in finding and holding employees who have the education and training to get the job done....You can open this book to practically any page and be instantly drawn into the story. Before I read the volume cover-to-cover, I flipped through the pages to just take a sneak peek at what was there. Reading just a paragraph or looking at organization wasn't enough. I wanted more. I was pulled in to keep reading. Gordon brings this issue to life. Recommended for business leaders, educators, human resource professionals, politicians, and enlightened citizens who are dedicated to making a difference for the generations that will follow us.
    —Library Bookwatch/Reviewer's Bookwatch/Midwest Book Review
    Sept/Oct 2005
  • Ed Gordon's latest book, The 2010 Meltdown, builds off his earlier success, Skill Wars, and makes a convincing case that organizations failing to be proactive to help create a skilled labor pool may very well face their own demise in the long term.
    —The City Line
  • Endorsement From Michael Metzler
    President/CEO
    Santa Ana Chamber of Commerce:
    A must-read for community leaders looking to understand this paradigm shift. The author makes a convincing case that those organization failing in the foresight and fight necessary to make the shift will begin to disappear along with low-skilled jobs.
  • Endorsement From Roger E. Herman
    author of Impending Crisis: Too Many Jobs, Too Few People:
    Thoroughly researched. Tightly written. This painfully realistic view of tomorrow's global workforce is provocative, instructive, and hopefully stimulating. An urgent must-read for senior executives, human resource professionals, political leaders, and progressive educators. Learn, be challenged, be inspired. It's all here!
  • Endorsement From Paul J. Miller
    Senior Partner
    Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal:
    Read it and spread its call. The data is devastating; the problem clear. We simply aren't educating or training for today's world. Unless we wake up and begin to act now, our economy will inevitable slide and, over time, even our democratic system may be threatened. The solution? Ed Gordon tells us that it does not lie with government--national or local--alone, or business alone, or community action alone, or family alone. It requires what he sees as a change of culture; we must mobilize the energies of all these elements to stop and reverse the meltdown. We can. But will we?
  • Endorsement From Peggy Luce
    Vice President, Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce:
    The 2010 Meltdown predicts that a major business culture shift is underway to balance short-term profit taking with long-term human capital development. Gordon suggests how to measure ROI on human capital investments and why employee training, development and education at all levels will be essential for business innovation and, therefore, business survival.
  • Endorsement From Joan M. Klaus
    Chair, Illinois College Access Network:
    The 2010 Meltdown strikes a much needed chord for a cultural change in schools and the way we value young people. Schools must become responsive to the real world. There is time to accomplish change, but is there the political will?
Description: "It's the economy, stupid," is a refrain the United States will never live down, and not without reason. The relentless march of technological development and globalization continues to put pressure on all national economies, providing opportunity for some and marginalization for others. Around the world, nations will need to overcome twin economic shocks: a wave of baby boomers will retire and leave the workforce, while too few young, well-educated people will be available to fill a rising tide of high-skill, technology-related jobs. Ed Gordon marshals vast amounts of data to illustrate how these trends are quickly converging, creating a labor vacuum--with potentially disastrous consequences for economic competitiveness and individual opportunity. In the United States, for example, major studies agree that the majority of the jobs now being created require skills possessed by only 20 percent of the current workforce; meanwhile, a large pool of under-trained workers are seeing their jobs exported to developing countries, automated, or outsourced, while millions of high-paying jobs, in such fields as engineering, computing, and health care are going unfilled. In The 2010 Meltdown, Gordon sounds a wake-up call to business leaders, policymakers, educators, and concerned citizens, employees, and parents--anyone with a stake in our economic future. Beyond the demographic issues, he notes that such cultural factors as Wall Street's obsession with short-term results (which favors cost-cutting over long-term training) and neglect of math and science skills at school are contributing to a fundamental mismatch between labor supply and demand. But the news is not all grim. Gordon highlights innovative initiatives in training, education, and community development in the United States and around the world that can serve as models for positive action, and he outlines a plan for reversing the destructive trends before we reach a crucial crossroad by the year 2010. Ultimately, The 2010 Meltdown is an optimistic book about social change, setting an agenda for reforms in education, policy, and business investment that will promote economic freedom, renewal, and prosperity.
Table of Contents:
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: People, Jobs, and Culture
  • America's Meltdown
  • The 2010 Crossroad
  • The Rise of the Techno-Peasants
  • Feeding the Sharks
  • Where Has the Schoolhouse Gone?
  • Help Wanted in America and the World
  • Structuring Renewal
  • Signposts at the Workforce Crossroad
  • The "Sixth Discipline"
  • Beyond the 2010 Crossroad
  • End Notes
  • Index
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