Thursday, July 30, 2009

Tie Handkerchief Mask

The sink

When talking about solutions for unemployment, everyone talks about three things: the labor market reform, training and R & D.
Focusing on the second, training is necessary to analyze first why everyone is agreed that training should be improved, how it is supposed to improve the skills of workers will reduce unemployment.

The rationale is this: If there is not enough skilled workers, companies will have to go elsewhere where they are. Or, if there are enough skilled workers, companies will go bankrupt leaving less competitive niche market for companies from other countries who have them. Or, the more skilled workers are, the better will the company be more competitive.

Similarly everyone agrees that to maintain a lustrous garden, we must have enough water for irrigation, proper pruning done and pay it accordingly.

Then we came to a garden that is clearly deteriorated as the English garden and invest the vast majority of our budget to make wells for water, plain and simple, and with that level of analysis.

Hey, that water is very good for gardens, but it turns out that we have access to running water for years, now, we can water all the plants very well and we are even lawn watering with distilled water also our surplus.

Well, is that the way to measure the deterioration of a garden of plants that die each year rebate for each well under construction. If you build a well, then subtract three dead plants. Sure, so let's fix the garden building wells, which is the best and fastest going to decrease the display.

Meanwhile, the caterpillars are eating the plants.

Turning to unemployment, it appears that 33% of English young people are overqualified for their jobs and we spend enormous amounts of money on courses unemployed because we invented them out of the way of statistics.

It is also our level of over-the largest OECD far as our unemployment.

Of course, we still have the stupidity of "everything is improving training, is good." "Anything more water is good."

I rather think that everything that is throwing money down a drain is to increase the problem, much as the precious wells are drawing water efficient.