This
study examines the potential for individuals trapped in dead-end jobs
in the service economy to cross the Digital Divide into jobs in the
knowledge economy. The
conventional wisdom is that the lack of human capital entraps workers
in dead-end jobs, unable to capitalize on the demand for high-skilled
labor in an increasingly networked - - and exclusive - -
society. Other approaches focus on the demand side, suggesting
that information technology (IT) itself acts to exacerbate societal
divisions and ultimately income inequality, particularly in high-tech
regions. IT not only drives the bifurcation of the economy into
high-end knowledge analyst and low-skill service jobs, but also
creates a new networked system of economic organization that has few
access points for those who are "switched off." The
implication is that as globalization accelerates and IT jobs shift
offshore, these patterns of bifurcation, inequality, and job
inaccessibility will only grow worse. |
The
author argues instead that a low-wage future is not inevitable for
disadvantaged groups. The downskilling of IT work, along with
the rise of workforce intermediaries, creates an opportunity to move
large numbers of low-wage workers into jobs with a career ladder,
particularly at the peak of the business cycle. Although some
entry-level work is disappearing offshore, the economy still offers
opportunities for jobseekers with little college education to work in
IT. Nonprofit training programs in the "second-chance"
employment and training system play an important role in making the
transition possible for those whom the educational system has
failed. The majority of training program graduates remain in IT
four years later, with a clear career trajectory ahead.
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