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Union says Quebec schools lack support staff
(www.winnipegfreepress.com)
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That depends on the range you look at. 51.88% of the population was in the workforce in 2001, increasing to 53.41% in 2023. We did peak at 54.55%. Either way, were talking relatively minor undulations
(Statscan 1 July population estimates and labour force characteristics)
Your workforce assumption was misinformed, unfortunately negating the rationale. I also drill specifically into industries 61 and 611 to show the number of workers, and number of workers per student, is actually increasing.
Capital is certainly part of it, but there have also been many improvements in I-O, timekeeping, and digitization.
We're not exactly missing that many people. We need around 300,000 people to restore job vacancies to the historical norm. Which, conveniently, is the size of that undulation.
Only if Statscan is misinformed, as the numbers come straight from they.
Those improvements came from capital, and as such capital gets the reward. If workers want a bigger piece of the pie, they are going to have to figure out how to become more productive themselves (or get their own capital).
I can't speak to all industries, and we also shifting to a bigger scope. The article in question is about education on Québec.
TL;DR: they have +15.0% students for +40.6% workers in the industry.
So the question is, how are there work vacancies when more people are working to provide services to proportionally fewer people.
Can you help me out here? I can find seasonally adjusted since 2015, but I'm bogged down with quarterly data, nothing annual.
I'm pretty sure people innovate, not capital. But innovation benefit capturing is outside my scope; I just steal them from other organizations and implement them in my own.
Regardless of who owns the rewards, the person years : output ratio should still be trending towards needing fewer workers over time.
The article is, but the labour market doesn't exist in a vacuum. It's not like some sci-fi program where you are born to be a teacher and can never be anything else. People can do whatever work they want. And it's not like teaching is going to be exactly high on anyone's list, so when there are other vacancies to fill...
Then just average the quarters. Good enough. Problem solved.
Going back to digitization, to use an as example, it is a computer that provides that digitization. The computer is what reaps the rewards. More specifically, the benefactor of the computer. And, indeed, those who have innovated in the computer space have become filthy rich. If you look at the world rich-list, the vast majority of them are there because of their contributions to computing.
So, yes, that is quite right. If one choses to innovate, they can become a benefactor of the capital. Again, that is why university was once promised to provide higher incomes, as it was believed that people would go there to use its facilities to innovate and then attach themselves to the capital that came out of that innovation. Of course, we know how that turned out...
No, it should be (and is) trending the other way. Capital may relax the need for people in certain existing roles, but it also opens new opportunities. Why do you think women didn't enter the workplace in any meaningful numbers until automation arrived? That is not a coincidence. That automation created a need for them.
Of course not, but we still have relatively more people in 61 and 611 than students requiring the service. I can't mentally rectify that.
A shortage of arbourist is relatively inconsequential to a shortage of pool maintainers, if you have 40% more pool repairers for only 15% more pools.
Okay, so the job vacancy rate is 4.7 right now instead of the 3.5 average.
But, all industries are demanding 45.1% population working instead of the average 43.89%.
So I'm seeing a correlation between vacancy and demand for jobs relative to population; and is unrelated to relative population working.
If we use payroll employees from the vacancies table, rather than global employment, percentage of population working is extremely stable around 42.6% ± 1.3%.
Therefore we aren't short employees because we have fewer workers relative to population, we are short employees because we are demanding more employees relative to population.
I did dump Q4 2020 though Q2 2021, the 3 quarters following the two quarters with no data due to Coronavirus.
Sure, still need less labour hours per output. Edit: as you agreed
I will argue that some in the computer computer space got filthy rich. The people who put their code up as open source, only to have it repackaged as proprietary, not so much. But that's the same in any industry.
Edit: after reading truncated part
I'm pretty sure they entered the workforce due to the great wars. And each time the soldiers returned there was massive labour upheaval.
The percentage of women in the labour market increases when the CPI increases.
And the population producing goods have remained relatively static since 1946 (3 million), Canadian labour growth has been in services.
Anyways captial not sharing gains always end in the gains being shared regardless. The question is if the capital owners will do it themselves, have it wrested by labour disputations, or have it wrested by war.
I'm full steam on the university production model being a sham. Not necessarily that what they do is bad, but that the economic benefits promised to prospective students is inaccurate, has been for some time, and the narrative has never adjusted.
40% more pool repairers are inconsequential if they will only work on residential pools and what you have is a commercial pool. You haven't dug deep enough into the data yet.
I believe we are talking about workers, not employees. A thing you might have heard of that happened over the last few years is said to have been especially hard on workers not categorized as employees. Perhaps they are who disappeared? Either by leaving the workforce or by becoming employees, rebalancing with any employees who left the workforce in the same period?
Obviously. As we have already discussed at length, capital only provides when it works for you. Throwing some code up on GitHub doesn't put it to work, and if someone else puts it work it isn't working for you.
Yes, but, as before, need more hours to fill in the new opportunities for workers. Maybe you haven't noticed, but we aren't living like they did in the 1800s. If we did, then yes, capital could do most of the work and people could laze around most days, having little to do. But that's not the choice we made.
That's my point, the data on why we need more people for the same education isn't available. The data on why we have fewer educators per child, despite more pers in the industry isn't available. We're only told there is a shortage of educators.
That data can generate insight into how to mitigate or reduce the educator to student ratio deficit.
That data could also generate insight into reducing the cost per student, or increasing educator:student ratios at the same cost.
Note: I'm using educator to teacher and support staff, I'm not sure if this is the correct terminology?
That's a plausible explanation. Probably doesn't apply to education. Perhaps we're seeing reductions in parental volunteerism within education, as a byproduct of increasing cost of living?
Here in lies my greatest problem. Not necessarily that we made that choice, but the byproduct that we have increased the costs to participate in society. Which comes with the third order effect of increasingly minimizing those who cannot afford that participation cost.
We've also reduced jobs/trades that were historically available with a low work : high idle time. For example, farming has historically had high idle time (with backbreaking surge to be sure) but with all the innovations I don't think anyone doubts the long, year round hours farmers are reporting.
Not available because it doesn't exist, not available because your request to see it was rejected?
It would not apply to teachers hired by a public school board, but that's hardly where teaching ends. Guitar teachers, for example, are quite likely to not be employees. We don't know the breakdown of what kind of teachers are involved.
Modern farming has high idle time, for the most part. Which is why 80% of farmers today have off-farm jobs. Being a farmer myself, I'm able to be here right now thanks to that idle time. Historically, not so much. There was always something needing to be done – stuff we can sick capital at nowadays.
The byproduct is that you get to participate in society. Historically, that farmer you speak of maybe got to town once a week to stock up on supplies and got to see his neighbours at church on Sunday. Otherwise, that was his only real interaction with the outside world.
Because I wouldn't know where to ask.
We don't know numbers for each subclassification, but we know what subclassifications exist. For guitar teachers, for example, while 61161 - fine arts schools exists as an NAICS code, it seems to be US only.
Fair enough, all the farmers I know are non-owner mushroom farmers, so that likely biased my view. They also bitch a lot, so it's not the most accurate information. I appreciate the new insight
IF you have the capital to do so. That is very much still based on luck. Someone born to a poor family in a factory town where school ends at grade ten, is going to have a different opertunities than someone born to the wealthy family, regardless of the real potential of each individual or their ability to successfully handle capital.
Even if you don't, it society is much more accessible today. Look at how dramatically the cost of food has fallen as a prime example. Not that long ago, food took up around half a typical family's budget. Now, more like 10-15%.
In the 1920s, a bushel of wheat was worth around $1 USD; or $15 USD today. Today's price is $6 USD for a bushel of wheat. That's a decline of $9 per bushel in real dollars over the past 100 years. And wheat is inflated right now due to the conflict in the Ukraine. Should that come to an end any time soon, that $9 will grow even larger.
That stark cost reduction enables things – like being able to subscribe to telephone and Internet service, which opens whole new doors to engage with society. Nearly everyone has phone and/or internet service today. That historic farmer most certainly didn't. They had church on Sunday. That's about it.
Today, if you live your life with nothing but church on Sunday, you really can laze around for most of the rest of your time. But, indeed, almost nobody is content with having nothing but church on Sunday anymore. For a lot of people today, church isn't even considered an activity worthy of their time because our standards for what makes for a good social activity have been able to rise so much higher.
Those are all fair points, if we're looking with a generational lens. On a more micro scale, at least with food, it's more bleak.
In 2007/8 and 2011/2, food insecurity was 7.1% and 7.8%. 2018 was 16.8% and 2021 was 18.4%.
So perhaps the average metric tracks up, but the lower echelons are being further marginalized.