Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Economy seizes experience from future workforce

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/08/opinion/08mon3.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=teens%20jobs&st=cse

In today's dynamic and competitive world, workers' skills and experience are essential for growth in a country's economy, yet they have been widely neglected in the current state of economic affairs. "The part-time jobs that American teenagers once took for granted — but that millions can no longer find — provided a lot more than pocket money" says David Brooks, an Op-Ed columinst for the New York Times.
Teenagers gain many important skills by being a part of a business or service. Whether working in a restaurant, a department store, or even the school library, there are many responsibilities associated with the work which require organization, innovation, and adaptabilty. Teens can also aquire valuable abilities such as time-management, civil mindedness, and social skills.
I realize that it is much more important for adults to have jobs so that they can put food on the table and clothes on their children's backs. I understand that desperate times call for desperate measures. I know that many people aren't thinking about the future right now, but are worried instead with how they will cope with the present.
But is this an excuse to not prepare my generation for our already-pathetic-looking future? We're already going to be icurn debt billions of dollars, probably still fighting a war with the Middle East, be drinking polluted water, have our world ravaged by preventable diseases like AIDS, and have a ozone level thinner than our wallets. No offense to all the adults of the world, but haven't you done enough?