QuoteThe American Way of Hiring Is Making Long-Term Unemployment Worse (http://blogs.hbr.org/2013/12/the-american-way-of-hiring-is-making-long-term-unemployment-worse/)
There are currently more than 4 million Americans who have been unemployed for 27 weeks or more. This figure doesn't include those who work part-time or on contracts — or those who, discouraged, have simply stopped trying. Many of them are older and well educated, and their situation doesn't seem to be improving despite America's slow crawl out of the recession. While last week's jobs numbers extolled a decline in the national unemployment rate, the numbers for the long-term unemployed didn't even budge.
MIT professor Ofer Sharone is tackling this issue head on, piloting a new initiative to help the long-term unemployed and gather valuable research on both job-seeking and hiring practices. He is also the author of the recent book Flawed System/Flawed Self: Job Searching and Unemployment Experiences.
Full Q&A at the link.
QuoteMIT professor Ofer Sharone is tackling this issue head on,
Thanks for the help, Ofer.
LOL, and it's in the Harvard Business Review. Now that's hilarious.
Quote from: CountDeMoney on December 14, 2013, 10:02:42 AM
LOL, and it's in the Harvard Business Review. Now that's hilarious.
I feel the same way about Paul Krugman being the leading left economist. HI I WENT TO YALE AND I TEACH AT PRINCETON AND I LIVE IN A MANSION APARTMENT IN NEW YORK CITY THANKS TO THE THEORIES OF JOHN MAYNARD KEYNES
Thanks for adding fuel to the fire. <_<
I went on a date last night and the guy told me all about how companies aren't hiring people back as they realized they were better off without the costly dead weight.
Quote from: garbon on December 14, 2013, 02:13:15 PM
I went on a date last night and the guy told me all about how companies aren't hiring people back as they realized they were better off without the costly dead weight.
But that's just crazy talk.
Quote from: Ideologue on December 14, 2013, 01:59:18 PM
Quote from: CountDeMoney on December 14, 2013, 10:02:42 AM
LOL, and it's in the Harvard Business Review. Now that's hilarious.
I feel the same way about Paul Krugman being the leading left economist. HI I WENT TO YALE AND I TEACH AT PRINCETON AND I LIVE IN A MANSION APARTMENT IN NEW YORK CITY THANKS TO THE THEORIES OF JOHN MAYNARD KEYNES
I don't understand your problem.
Professor plus Ivy League plus rich? Hits pretty much all of my buttons, doesn't it?
Kinda petty, don't you think?
It probably would be petty if I'd went to Stanford.
Quote from: Ideologue on December 14, 2013, 03:15:03 PM
It probably would be petty if I'd went to Stanford.
It would be one thing if you found it immoral to have those things, but I can't help but think, it pushes your buttons as it is what you desire for yourself.
Quote from: garbon on December 14, 2013, 03:20:24 PM
Quote from: Ideologue on December 14, 2013, 03:15:03 PM
It probably would be petty if I'd went to Stanford.
It would be one thing if you found it immoral to have those things, but I can't help but think, it pushes your buttons as it is what you desire for yourself.
Well that's just telling tales out of school. Where do you even pick these ideas up?
No, I don't very much like that we have elite institutions and common institutions that try to mimic them (without mimicking what makes them important, specifically the networks Ivies open up for their grads and the power of their brand name); and I don't like how they bifurcate the population into Eloi and Morlocks (you're the Morlocks, we get eaten); and I don't like education being turned into a sorting mechanism that the sortees pay for.
But if we've gotta have 'em, sure, I wish I'd gone to an Ivy League school instead of some state college nobody outside of upstate SC ever heard.
You don't like the order of things but you wish you'd gotten a place.
They're not mutually inconsistent.
If I lived in 1859, I'm pretty sure I could make both these statements with complete honesty and without cognitive dissonance:
"Slavery is bad."
"I am glad I am not a slave."
Ide maybe you should marry someone with better prospects than yourself, problems solved.
Quote from: OttoVonBismarck on December 14, 2013, 04:56:42 PM
Ide maybe you should marry someone with better prospects than yourself, problems solved.
Disagree. He isn't the sort to hide his jealousy, and being openly jealous of your wife is a ticket to a shitty marriage.
Quote from: grumbler on December 14, 2013, 05:08:58 PM
Quote from: OttoVonBismarck on December 14, 2013, 04:56:42 PM
Ide maybe you should marry someone with better prospects than yourself, problems solved.
Disagree. He isn't the sort to hide his jealousy, and being openly jealous of your wife is a ticket to a shitty marriage.
I dunno, I'm sure he'd come to terms with it after a while like Otto.
The secret is to get in early, and then you can view it as an "investment" that is paying off over time, instead of like you've been hired by a "daddy."
Quote from: Ideologue on December 14, 2013, 04:31:32 PM
They're not mutually inconsistent.
If I lived in 1859, I'm pretty sure I could make both these statements with complete honesty and without cognitive dissonance:
"Slavery is bad."
"I am glad I am not a slave."
That's because that isn't an apt comparison. You need to change the last line to something of the degree of wishing to be a master.
Quote from: garbon on December 14, 2013, 05:19:56 PM
Quote from: Ideologue on December 14, 2013, 04:31:32 PM
They're not mutually inconsistent.
If I lived in 1859, I'm pretty sure I could make both these statements with complete honesty and without cognitive dissonance:
"Slavery is bad."
"I am glad I am not a slave."
That's because that isn't an apt comparison. You need to change the last line to something of the degree of wishing to be a master.
Yep. Plenty of the founding fathers thought that slavery was bad, yet owned slaves.
Quote from: OttoVonBismarck on December 14, 2013, 04:56:42 PM
Ide maybe you should marry someone with better prospects than yourself, problems solved.
If only that were the option for men it is for women. Even these days
Quote from: Tyr on December 15, 2013, 03:29:48 AM
Quote from: OttoVonBismarck on December 14, 2013, 04:56:42 PM
Ide maybe you should marry someone with better prospects than yourself, problems solved.
If only that were the option for men it is for women. Even these days
It is, you just have to be prepared to rub the bunions.
Quote from: CountDeMoney on December 14, 2013, 09:53:21 AM
QuoteMIT professor Ofer Sharone is tackling this issue head on,
Thanks for the help, Ofer.
LOL, that's the file name for my resume: Ofer. GET IT ITS A JOKE SON A GAG