Skilled
in sentence
560 examples of Skilled in a sentence
In Britain, where coalminers were unemployed in large numbers, the expansion of the motor-vehicle and engineering industries was hindered by a shortage of
skilled
mechanics.
Free movement of
skilled
labor could be accompanied by binding international requirements that migrants from poor countries spend, say, one year in five working in their countries of origin.
Also, given that 18-year olds are less
skilled
than average Russian workers, the military would attract better-trained and more productive soldiers, resulting in further savings.
Thus, as Klaus Schwab of the World Economic Forum observes, the “scarcity of a
skilled
workforce rather than the availability of capital is more likely to be the crippling limit to innovation, competitiveness, and growth.”
All the real work in corporations is done by
skilled
immigrants;Ivy League colleges have adopted the names of their Asian counterparts in order to survive; the economy is beholden to China’s central bank; and “yuan-pegged US dollars” have replaced regular currency as the safe asset of choice.
Russia has the know-how,
skilled
engineering, and natural-resource base to become a global competitor in a range of major high-tech industries, including nuclear energy, commercial aviation, commercial space technology (including satellites and GPS), ICT hardware and software, electric vehicles, high-speed rail, petrochemicals, and heavy equipment for the mining and hydrocarbon sectors.
It is often assumed that a pool of very highly
skilled
labor is crucial to deploy AI.
For example, the new labor-displacing technologies could make feasible activities for which there had been insufficient
skilled
labor.
Someone who has been unfaithful to his or her spouse can be a
skilled
leader, just as a faithful wife or husband can be a poor one.
Whether amateur, criminal, or governmental, many organizations – both domestic and foreign – are
skilled
at reverse engineering how tech platforms parse information.
With the exceptions of the US and Germany, the wage gap between
skilled
and unskilled workers has been declining in all Western countries in the last 17 years.
It is also possible, however, that the drop in the wage gap between
skilled
and unskilled workers represents competition from increasingly intelligent machines.
Instead, it has remained largely unchanged, and it is the unemployment rate among
skilled
workers that is on the rise, doubling in the US and the United Kingdom from 2000 to 2012.
The location of these lesser-known clusters underscores the point that investors, seeking low-cost real estate and a
skilled
workforce, should look more carefully at India’s economic geography when deciding where to place their operations.
Unemployment remains high because Europe cannot afford the job guarantees, heavy payroll taxation, short work weeks, and high-take-home pay (especially for lower
skilled
workers) that it aspires to.
But the decline in the pay differential between
skilled
and unskilled workers – what economists call the “skill premium” – has also played an important role.
If pay differentials have narrowed because of an increase in the relative supply of
skilled
workers, we can be hopeful that declining inequality in Latin America will not stand in the way of faster growth (and may even be an early indicator of it).
But if the underlying cause is the decline in demand for
skilled
workers, smaller differentials would suggest that the modern, skill-intensive industries on which future growth depends are not expanding sufficiently.
Financial capital and direct investment will flow from West to East, the Western economies will be forced to specialize in highly skilled, capital-intensive production that creates fewer jobs, and unskilled immigrants will move to the West.
In the “Brexit” vote, the fault lines were clear: rich versus poor, gainers versus losers from trade/globalization,
skilled
versus unskilled, educated versus less educated, young versus old, urban versus rural, and diverse versus more homogenous communities.
Establishment parties were once controlled by globalization’s beneficiaries: capital owners; skilled, educated, and digitally savvy workers; urban and cosmopolitan elites; and unionized white- and blue-collar employees.
After all, classical liberalism is based on the equal protection of inalienable rights such as life, liberty and property, whereas democracy is premised on majority rule, which may run roughshod over the rights of minorities, including capitalists, entrepreneurs, and the highly
skilled.
The particularly high domestic shares for R&D and compensation indicate that US multinationals have strong incentives to keep their high-wage, research-intensive activities in the US – good news for America’s
skilled
workers and the country’s capacity for innovation.
Rapidly expanding demand for
skilled
workers cannot be satisfied as long as average schooling still totals eight years.
But Italy is not just losing skilled, ambitious, and visionary workers.
So my guess is that we would be well-advised to put our money on the theory that our central bankers today are more skilled, more far-sighted, and less prone to either short-sightedly jerking themselves around or being jerked around by political masters who unpredictably change the objectives they are supposed to pursue year after year.
In less than a decade, it will be the huge world market, rather than national markets, that allocates capital, finance, and
skilled
labor.
Redressing the imbalance between the supply of and demand for
skilled
workers globally requires a unified agenda of the right education, training, and immigration policies.
While this investment will pay off in time, countries need to match
skilled
workers to today’s open jobs in order to preserve their economies’ vitality.
That is why educational investments to improve future opportunities must be paired with progressive immigration policies that facilitate inflows of the
skilled
workers needed to address today’s talent shortages.
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