By 2030, more than 30% of the US labor market will need to change jobs or upgrade their skills if they want to continue to advance their careers, according to an analysis by McKinsey. But it is not just an American problem. Nearly 400 million workers globally will need to make similar changes, according to the same report.
To tackle this, we need to look beyond partisan gridlock in Washington and central governments around the world for solutions. There are strong ideas and real results being produced in cities and state capitals already. Now, it is urgent that business, communities and local governments work together to invest in and push meaningful local policy and education solutions.
But Jaime is being polite. Under the current system state governments are mostly restricted by the ignorant senators they send to the Swamp, starting with Cruz, Tom Cotton, Inhoife, Sanders and Warren. Al of them incompetent to manage large government programs and their mismanagement rubsd their state of liquidity.
Jaime knows this, he reads my blog and that is why the wrote opinion piece, he knows i am right. We have a state skew ptoblem, and with that structural problem combined with the 50 Hoovers fraud of the progressive left has left all governments on the edge in the USA. We are now almost certainly bankrupt at the government level, and the effects are being felt in the painful and unremitting effort to raise taxes on poor people.
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