speeches · July 10, 2017
Regional President Speech
Patrick T. Harker · President
Apprenticeships: Nobility and Necessity
Chemical Heritage Foundation
Philadelphia, PA
July 11, 2017
Patrick T. Harker
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve System
or the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC).
Apprenticeships: Nobility and Necessity
Chemical Heritage Foundation
Philadelphia, PA
July 11, 2017
Patrick T. Harker
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Good morning. It’s truly a pleasure to be here, and I want to extend my sincerest thanks to
everyone who made today possible. This is an incredibly important topic, and the more people
we can bring to the table, the better. There’s been a growing interest in apprenticeships in the
area — in everything from IT to health care to financial services — and their success is a
testament to the power of public-private partnerships.
I’m going to do something a bit different today. Normally, the policymaker would get up and
recite key statistics, which, frankly, is our comfort zone. You notice no one ever calls a monetary
policymaker to host the Tonys.
And while it’s not quite a Broadway number — the only one I’m qualified for is Hamilton, and
believe me, you don’t want to hear me in a rap battle over central banking — I’m going to leave
the heavy data to today’s expert presenters. I will, of course, address workforce development
from a policy perspective, but I’m also going to add a bit of the personal. Which counts as really
shaking things up in Fed world.
That’s the segue to the reason I’m here: Why, exactly, does the Fed care about workforce
development?
I should note that the answer to that question — along with everything else I say today —
reflects my thoughts alone and not necessarily anyone else’s in the Federal Reserve System,
including my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC).
With that duly noted, there are actually a few reasons I care about workforce development. For
one, it helps the Fed meet one of the goals set for us by Congress: maximum employment. For
another, a better educated and more skilled workforce benefits us all, whether it’s more
1
innovation, better goods and services, or additional revenue flowing into the economy. But
there’s also my sincere belief that everyone should have a fair shot at success. That means
developing skills that can help them get there, and apprenticeships are a critical tool.
I think all areas of training are important, but I’m especially focused on how we address the
changing landscape of the American workforce at a pivotal time in history. Now, to be fair,
“pivotal time in history” is probably one of the most overused speech lines out there. But I
honestly believe we’re experiencing a confluence of events that makes the needs and challenges
of the labor market unique to our time. We’ve endured the biggest crisis since the Great
Depression, and we’re finally emerging from its shadow. We’re seeing demographic changes —
like the first wave of baby boom retirements — that are fundamentally altering the composition
of the labor force. We’re in the midst of sustained technological change that has indeed disrupted
many industries, with apologies for using a buzzword. And we’re seeing a skills gap that’s
affecting employers and job seekers alike.
While there’s some debate over the extent of the gap, research by my staff shows it is a real
issue, even in a labor market with very little slack left. And while data are not, I admit, the plural
of anecdote, I’ve been hearing it from employers across the region as well. They have jobs but
can’t find people with the skills to fill them. Meanwhile, there are people who’d love the work
but don’t have the training to qualify.
Skills training in general, and apprenticeships in particular, can help to address this gap. We need
more investment, and more involvement, to truly make a difference. And we need a cultural shift
as well. That won’t necessarily be easy — as someone who spent a lifetime in academia, I can
attest to the difficulty of cultural change — but it is definitely necessary.
Something that’s characterized America since our inception is that we’re incredibly creative. We
excel at industries as varied as the physical landscape of the country. We’ve revolutionized so
many sectors, and every day we see more examples of how we’re adapting our ways and
methods of working to keep up with that change. Yet at the same time, we’ve become more and
more rigid about the paths to success. We seem to be locked into the idea that the only way to
access and advance in a career is through a four-year degree.
That has to change.
2
There are many ways to acquire skills. We know now more than ever that people learn in
different ways. Not everyone is programmed to pick up information in a classroom setting. Not
everyone wants or needs or should get a traditional bachelor’s degree. And not everyone who
wants one needs to do so immediately.
And that’s OK. That’s good. We need to stack our workforce with people who think and solve
and learn differently. Apprenticeships aren’t just an alternative; they’re a smart, first-choice path,
and we should view them that way. They’ve stood the test of time for a reason.
Apprenticeships go back to ancient Egypt and Babylon; they were so important they were
enshrined in the Code of Hammurabi back in the 18th century BC.
From the late middle ages, apprenticeships guaranteed a path to employment and maintenance or
rise in social status. They were a hallmark of the Renaissance and made an important economic
contribution during one of the great periods in human history.
Leonardo da Vinci was an apprentice; so were George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and Paul
Revere. There is incredible nobility and history there, and we should celebrate that.
Apprenticeships have changed and adapted to the needs of shifting economic landscapes over
time. But some things have persisted, and they are important. First, apprenticeships can be a path
to economic mobility. The road from apprenticeship to journeyman to artisan is as viable today
as it was in da Vinci’s time. Second, the required concentration on skill not only maintains the
quality of a trade, it fosters the kind of expertise that can lead to innovation.
The change in attitudes I’d like to see was evident when I visited Roxborough High School last
year. They have an Academies program that allows students to pick a course of concentration
while they study the regular curriculum. It’s not an apprenticeship program but shares some of
the characteristics, including setting the students up to enter the workforce directly from high
school. They can earn a good salary if they want to work for a few years before returning to
school, they can work part-time while continuing their education, or they can just start their
climb up the professional ladder immediately. Programs like this are a great entryway to what
my staff has termed “opportunity occupations”: jobs that pay at or above the median wage but
3
don’t require a college degree. They did research with the Cleveland and Atlanta Feds to identify
not just where this work is in terms of sector but actually where they are geographically.
The students at Roxborough know that the skills they’re getting give them a leg up in the job
market, and I hope that their attitudes toward creative paths to education and training will soon
be the prevailing ones. We all have our own ways of getting to the endpoint, and, if we want our
labor market running on all cylinders, we need a workforce that is as innovative and creative as
the sectors they represent.
One of the great things about apprenticeships is that they’re useful at any stage in life. I visited
Philly Shipyard a few weeks ago, which has one of the most well-established programs in the
region, and met apprentices in their 20s and 30s. One of them was Samantha, who went to art
school and has a B.F.A. But she decided she wanted to go down a different path and joined the
apprenticeship program. She’s now one of the top welders. Her creative and innovative talents as
an artist translated into incredible skill at welding. She loves what she does and, almost as
importantly, sees real growth potential and opportunity in the company.
She and the rest of the apprentices aren’t just getting the skills to become masters of their trade;
they’re getting the sanctuary of seeing a solid path to not just stability but success.
I grew up in a blue-collar neighborhood in New Jersey, where my sister and I were the first in
our family to go to college. I could tell you that back then, you could get a high school diploma,
or go to community college, and still live a comfortable, middle-class life — and that was
definitely true for some people. But it wasn’t true for everyone; some people never had the
access to that security or had to work twice as hard. And it’s frankly less achievable for most
people now. But I still think it should be a path available to everyone.
It’s probably more resonant coming off the July 4 holiday, but the core ethos of the American
dream — that if you work hard, you can get ahead — is still something quite profound. We just
need better ways for people to get there. Skills training and apprenticeships can help.
Here’s where I go back to being a typical policymaker by plugging my staff’s work: If anyone
here wants more information, the Philadelphia Fed has recently published a guide to
apprenticeships in our area to provide private sector organizations with information on how you
4
can get involved. Copies are available to everyone, and, since Keith Rolland is responsible, you
can corner him and ask him all the questions you want in person. It’s good for the workforce, and
it’s good for business.
Thank you.
5
Cite this document
APA
Patrick T. Harker (2017, July 10). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20170711_patrick_t_harker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20170711_patrick_t_harker,
author = {Patrick T. Harker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2017},
month = {Jul},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20170711_patrick_t_harker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}