Higher Education and Workforce Policy: Creating More ...

April 2015

Higher Education and Workforce Policy: Creating More Skilled Workers (and Jobs for Them to Fill)

Harry Holzer, Visiting Fellow

Executive Summary

Employment of Americans in middle-wage jobs has been declining, due to trends both in employer demand and worker skill attainment. Workforce development in the US now mostly occurs in community and forprofit colleges, as well as the lower-tier of 4-year colleges. Enrollment rates are high, even among the disadvantaged, but completion rates are very low and earnings are uneven for graduates. Community colleges lack not only resources but also incentives to respond to the job market (while the for-profit colleges need stronger regulation). Sectoral training and career pathway models show promise but need scaling and maintenance of quality, and employers also need greater incentives to participate and create more good jobs. Three sets of policies should help address these problems: 1) Providing more resources to community (and lower-tier 4-year) colleges but also creating incentives and accountability by basing state subsidies on student completion rates and earnings of graduates; 2) Expanding high-quality career and technical education plus work-based learning models like apprenticeship; and 3) Assisting and incentivizing employers to create more good jobs. Other supportive policies - including higher minimum wages, paid parental leave, and labor law reform - would help as well. Together these proposals should create more good jobs and more good workers to fill them.

Introduction

At the same time, because the labor market rewards college credentials much more generously than in the past,

efforts to improve worker skills have shifted to the realm of

As I argue in an accompanying policy brief, the notion that the middle of the job market is being "hollowed out" requires some nuance. More accurately, there has been some decline over time in middle-skill job creation, but the decline is mostly limited to older middle-wage clerical, construction and production jobs in which high school graduates (or even dropouts) were well paid. A "newer middle" is rising in areas such as health technology, advanced manufacturing, information technology (IT) and a range of service jobs;

higher education, and federal funding through Pell grants and other mechanisms has risen. State subsidies for public colleges have also grown over the past several decades (though they have declined in the past several years as pressure from Medicaid and other budget commitments grows). Overall, public spending on higher education totals near $200B per year. And the for-profit colleges have also grown dramatically, especially by targeting Pell-eligible students.

these require more postsecondary education or training Accordingly, most "job training" for the disadvantaged now

than in the past. Skill demands are also rising in formerly takes place at community colleges and for-profit schools, in

low-skill jobs. But the growth of em-

AA or certificate programs (where the

ployment in the new middle has also

latter usually take one year or less and

been modest, relative to the shrinking In higher education today, dropout are sometimes for academic credit,

of the older one.

rates are high and many students do and sometimes not). But educational

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generate better employees ? by raising wages or investing Below is a discussion of both the benefits and limitations

in training ? there are other reasons why it might not be of some more recent approaches to providing workforce

economically sensible for them to solve this issue on their services and job training through higher education, and a

own.1 And the costs and difficulties they face in attracting or set of broad proposals for how they could be improved.

generating these workers likely limits their interest in creat- And, given the ongoing shrinkage of middle-wage jobs ?

ing good-paying, middle-skill jobs in the first place.2

which disadvantaged Americans need to obtain to escape

Accordingly, many employers and policy-makers look to our institutions of higher education and our public workforce system to help address these issues. Because of ongoing questions about their effectiveness, the federal resources

poverty and enjoy upward mobility ? I also discuss some ways in which the public sector could directly encourage more growth in employer job creation (or labor demand) in this part of the market.

invested in the workforce programs (administered through the US Department of Labor to state and local workforce

Recent Workforce Innovations:

boards) have shrunken dramatically; total federal funding allocated through the recently reauthorized Workforce In-

Successes and Limitations

novation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) is now much lower To ensure that higher education offerings fit the needs of

than was true under earlier versions of this legislation in the the labor market, and especially employers, new models of

1970s and beyond.3

collaboration between colleges and industry are being de-

veloped and widely implemented. In one approach, called

1. The reasons include the low levels of basic skills among the workers who would need to be trained, the fairly general nature of the skills (which means that trained workers could easily move to another firm and take their training with them), and the high fixed costs of setting up

"sectoral" training, workforce intermediaries create "partnerships" between training providers (usually community colleges) and employers (or their associations) in industries with lots of employment growth and good-paying jobs

training programs for smaller firms.

(below the BA level). The purpose of the partnerships is to

2. As I note below, the contrast between US and German companies in this regard is very informative. German companies likely create more such jobs in manufacturing and other industries because they believe that German workers are well-trained in these skills as they emerge from high school apprenticeship programs.

3. The federal government now spends about $5B a year on WIOA; at its

peak, the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA) spent about $40B in current dollars in 1980. But USGAO (2011) reports total federal spending of $18B in 47 different federal workforce programs in 2009, which have likely been reduced somewhat by now while the numbers of programs have been cut to 32 in WIOA.

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ensure that worker training is well-targeted to the needs of The Obama Administration has also formally endorsed

employers, who commit to hiring the trainees. This model these models (referring to the sectoral approach as

has been used most frequently in health care, advanced "job-driven" training) through a series of competitive grants,

manufacturing, IT, and some service fields around the like the Trade Adjustment Assistance Community College

country.

and Career Training (TAACCCT) and workforce innovation

In a related approach, "career pathways" are developed in which workers combine classroom training and work experience through a sequence of jobs, within or across firms in an industry, and a sequence of credentials that signal their

grants from USDOL (Haskins, 2014). More such programs have been proposed in the President's FY2016 budget. And many new provisions in WIOA are designed to promote these approaches as well.

growing skill levels. For instance, unskilled nursing aides Despite all this activity, major questions remain about the

can first get Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) certificates, success of these efforts. For one thing, the federal grant

and use them in employment, while ul-

programs are many in number, but

timately going on to get associate de-

they are small and fragmented, and

grees (or AAs) that enable them to be-

Secondary schools often fail

the agencies implementing them at

come licensed practical nurses (LPN).

to provide strong academic or

the local level remain quite "siloed"

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er and Elliott, 2011, 2014), a sectoral program for youth Another problem is that many low-income students or

? Year Up ? raised earnings by similar amounts after two workers lack the basic academic skills to be trained in the

years, and the longer-term effects are also positive.4 There technical work often needed (especially in the well-com-

are also ongoing efforts by the US Department of Health pensated STEM fields). Their secondary schools often fail

and Human Services (DHHS) to evaluate several career to provide them with strong academic or technical/employ-

pathway programs for the disadvantaged.5

ment-related skills, though high-quality career and techni-

Due to the success of the sectoral programs in these evaluations ? and their appeal to governors and mayors who see sectoral and career pathway programs as being con-

cal education (or CTE), as in Career Academies or apprenticeships and other types of "work-based learning," could provide both.

sistent with their economic development policies - much And questions remain over whether it makes sense to focus

activity at the state and regional level now focuses on how training on specific sectors and occupational pathways, at

to build and grow these models, with local and state work- a time when the labor market appears to be more dynamic

force boards as well as higher education agencies heavily ? and therefore more uncertain ? than ever. Some analysts

involved in the process (National Governors Association, predict large upheavals in these markets in the next few

2013). Some states have also joined "pathways" networks decades, with many firms and industries facing dislocation

to more fully develop and scale these efforts.6 The Nation- while newer ones grow. If accurate, such upheaval could

al Fund for Workforce Solutions, created by several ma- render workers with narrow training more obsolete than

jor foundations with strong workforce interests, has also those with broader preparation.7

funded major sectoral operations in roughly 30 cities and regions.

Even if this upheaval does not materialize, workers will change firms and industries over time. Training them in

4. The initial study by Roder and Elliott (2011) showed clear and large earnings gains after 2 years, while the more recent follow-up study at the 4-year point (2014) still showed positive but more modest results.

skills too specific to one sector might lead their earnings gains to erode over time. Some analysts argue that the best education and training for the 21st century is not sec-

5. The US Department of Health and Human Services is evaluating several such promising programs in its Innovative Strategies for Self-Sufficiency project.

6. One set of states has joined in the Pathways to Prosperity Networks, while others have joined the Alliance for Quality Pathways Network organized by the Center on Law and Social Policy (CLASP).

7. Brynjolffson and Macafee (2014) argue that digital technologies will dramatically affect productivity and make employment in many industries more volatile over time, though at least some economists (like Robert Gordon of Northwestern University) are skeptical of this point of view.

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tor-specific, but broader analytical skills (like problem-solving and critical thinking) that can be used to enhance job performance wherever workers become employed.8

Postsecondary Education and the Labor Market More Broadly

Outside of sectoral and pathway programs, many millions of Americans enroll in either community colleges or for-profit schools to obtain skill training and credentialing for the job market. College enrollments have risen quite dramatically since 2000, as have degree completions to a lesser extent.9

But some higher education results are disappointing, especially for disadvantaged youth and adults who enroll there (often with the aid of Pell grants). These students are very heavily concentrated in community and for-profit colleges (and lower-tier four-year colleges). But nearly 60 percent of community college students enter with weak academic preparation and require skill remediation, known as "developmental education" (Bailey and Cho, 2012). Most of these programs seem ineffective or even harmful.10 More broadly, completion rates in AA programs are only about 30 percent among young students and lower among older students (25 and above).11

And, in Florida and some other states recently studied, up to half of all AA students enroll in humanities programs such as "general studies" or "liberal studies" with virtually no labor market value. A range of certificate programs or more technical AA degrees (such as Associates of Applied Science, or AAS) have much stronger impacts on earnings but generate many fewer enrollees (Backes et al., 2014).

Why might that be the case? The community (and lower-tier four-year) colleges often lack resources to better serve these students with more high-quality course options to choose from, better academic and career-counseling, or

8. See the National Academy of Sciences (2013) report on the "21st Century skills" that will be needed by workers in the labor market to be successful over time. Liberal arts programs in higher education frequently argue that longer-term labor market success depends more on general academic and intellectual skills rather than the specific vocational skills taught in these programs.

9. According to the National Center for Education Statistics, overall college enrollment for those aged 20-24 was 22.3 and 40 percent in 1980 and 2012 respectively; BA attainment in those years for those aged 25-29 was 22.5 and 33.5 percent in those two years.

10. See Bettinger et al. (2013) or Clotfelter et al. Remediation could be harmful is students with family or other obligations, and therefore only a limited amount of time available to pursue their education, are forced to spend large chunks of that time taking classes that are not for academic credit.

11. See The College Board (2013).

more effective remediation. But they also frequently lack the incentives to respond to local labor demand, by expanding teaching capacity in high-demand fields. Expanding this capacity is often more expensive, in both teacher salaries and equipment costs, than building it in other fields. And the cash-strapped colleges generally receive the same subsidies from their states, regardless of student success in the classroom or the job market.

Accordingly, in fields such as health technology, the available classes become over-subscribed very quickly, and interested students can fail to achieve the credentials they desire. For other reasons, many community colleges remain primarily focused on their traditional mission of simply feeding students into the 4-year colleges, rather than training individuals for the workforce. This seems especially true for those located fairly near to a four-year college, to which they feed most of their transferring students (Backes and Velez, 2015).

The for-profit colleges face stronger incentives to respond to the labor market, but often generate worse outcomes for poor students. These colleges have grown dramatically since 2000, and now account for over a fourth of all Pell grant recipients ? to whom they market their programs quite aggressively (Deming et al., 2013). Completion rates in their certificate programs are high and in their AA programs are a bit above the average for public CCs, but they are very low in bachelor's (BA) programs.

Regardless of whether students finish their degrees, many also leave the for-profit schools with huge debts incurred, because of their very high tuition costs. And tuition costs at the public colleges have grown quite dramatically too. While student debt is manageable in many cases, and still constitutes a good investment overall for young people, it can be quite burdensome to those who have not finished their degree programs or who have difficulty finding or keeping employment in their field of study or more broadly. And efforts to regulate the for-profit and other colleges through "gainful employment" rules have been stymied to date, largely because of legal challenges to the regulations.

Policies to Enhance These Approaches

The foregoing discussion indicates that, while many new initiatives (like sectoral and career pathway programs) are growing and seem promising, large concerns remain about how to improve higher education and labor market outcomes more broadly, especially for disadvantaged students. Trends both on the demand and supply sides of the labor market for skills underlie these concerns.

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What we need, overall, are policies to help fund or incentivize colleges to improve the student skill attainments at the sub-BA and BA levels that the labor market rewards, as well as efforts to improve the numbers of middle-wage jobs they would be needed to fill. Some efforts to build the relevant skills should start in secondary schools (or even earlier), and continue into the postsecondary world. And we should also incentivize employers to participate in various skill-building efforts, and perhaps to create more middle-skill jobs too.

Below are some broad policy proposals that would try to accomplish these goals.

1) More Resources and Better Incentives for the Public Colleges

The public colleges that mostly enroll poor students ? in other words, the community (and lower-tier public 4-year) colleges - need more resources targeted at services and supports for disadvantaged students, as well as stronger incentives to expand capacity in high-demand fields.

One way to do this would be through a postsecondary version of "Race to the Top," which strongly rewarded states for undertaking K-12 reforms in the past decade. Indeed, the President Obama's original American Graduation Initiative, proposed in 2009, would have constituted such an effort, though it was never implemented in the fashion intended.12

The new version would target public colleges at both the 2-year and 4-year levels. States that create more accountability for their colleges ? by partially tying subsidy levels for colleges to their student outcomes - would receive additional federal funding, but only for the schools that serve many disadvantaged students, and only for expanding teaching capacity in high-demand fields or providing better supports and services (like child care, better counseling or academic "coaching" and reforms in developmental education) for these students.13

12. Obama called for an investment of nearly $12B into his AGI program, to be funded by savings from reforms in the student loan program. But, in the end, these savings were largely used to pay for health insurance in the Affordable Care Act, or ACA. Of the initial proposal, the only part that was implemented was $2B of competitive grants to community colleges or states under the Trade Adjustment Assistance Community College and Career Training (TAACCCT) grants administered by the US Department of Labor between 2010 and 2014.

13. See Holzer (2014) for a discussion of accountability policies for higher education in the states and Long (2014) on possible reforms in developmental education.

Many states have begun to experiment with such accountability, though most efforts to date are based only on academic rather than employment outcomes.14 The new accountability measures would also be based on the subsequent earnings of their students.15 Administrative data systems are now available for the states to measure both, and their development has been encouraged by the federal government in recent years.16

But incentives must be structured to avoid "creaming" by the colleges, who might simply raise their admission requirements and avoid at-risk students, to make their outcome numbers look better. This problem can be addressed either by having at least some of the accountability measures defined separately for minorities or disadvantaged students, or by using "value-added" measures of success that reward schools not for outcome levels but for improvements among students who might start with a low base level of academic outcomes. Another practical problem involves how to include students who move out of state to work, and therefore are not included in state databases. This problem is challenging but certainly not insurmountable.17

Other policies might also be used to provide new resources plus better incentives for the public colleges. Reforms in the Pell program (and student loans) that simplify eligibility rules and the application process, while also strengthening academic requirements and providing more support provision to poor students, could be embedded in a reauthorized Higher Education Act (The College Board, 2013). And evolving federal regulation of the for-profit colleges (focusing on "gainful employment" and encouraging income-based repayment plans) should continue. At least some of these approaches will likely generate political and legal pushback from the higher education community, both public and private, who might prefer the status quo (and especially those who teach "liberal arts" at the former), though the additional resources provided to them could help limit their opposition.

14. The National Conference of State Legislatures tracks "performance-based funding" for higher education at their website on "Performance-Based Funding for Higher Education."

15. To avoid placing too much emphasis on short-term earnings outcomes, earnings outcomes of higher education should be based on five years of data after college.

16. See Zinn and Van Kluenen (2014) for discussion of the various state administrative data initiatives that the federal government has supported in recent years or which are now underway.

17. For instance, in the future it will likely be possible for states to link their data across states and follow individuals who cross state lines for work after college. In the meantime, surveys of such people might generate usable data.

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