Fortune | FORTUNE 09月24日 02:49
福特CEO呼吁重视“必需经济”
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福特CEO Jim Farley发出警告,美国的经济实力不仅依赖于科技创新,更在于支撑国家运转的“必需经济”——制造业、技术工人和基础设施等行业。他指出,人工智能和自动化技术可能导致近半数白领工作消失,而另一方面,技术工人却面临严重短缺。Farley呼吁改革教育体系,增加对职业教育和学徒制的投入,以弥补技能差距,并使工业岗位对年轻人更具吸引力,从而保障国家的经济基础。

🏭 **必需经济的挑战与机遇**:Jim Farley认为,美国的经济根基在于制造业、技术工人和基础设施等“必需经济”领域,而非仅限于科技创新中心。然而,这些领域正面临劳动力短缺的严峻挑战,尤其是在制造业和建筑业。他强调,这些看似传统但至关重要的行业,是支撑国家正常运转的关键。

🤖 **AI对白领工作的冲击**:Farley预测,随着人工智能的飞速发展,未来十年内美国近半数的白领工作可能被取代。许多初级编程、法律和行政等入门级岗位面临巨大风险,这可能导致失业率飙升。他指出,当前的教育体系过于侧重四年制大学教育,忽视了其他同样重要的职业发展路径。

🛠️ **技术工人短缺与教育改革**:与白领工作的潜在冲击形成对比的是,技术工人需求旺盛但供应不足。Farley认为,美国应借鉴德国等国的经验,大力发展职业教育和学徒制,让技术类工作成为吸引年轻人的重要选择。他倡导制定国家战略,加大对职业教育和学徒项目的投资,以解决技能差距问题,并重振这些对国家经济至关重要的行业。

💰 **福特的实践与薪酬策略**:为了应对工人倦怠和薪酬不满,福特CEO Jim Farley效仿亨利·福特的做法,将临时工转为全职,提高薪资和福利。尽管成本高昂,但他认为这是吸引人才、使工业岗位更具吸引力和经济可行性的必要之举,这也有助于缓解行业内长期存在的工人不满情绪。

Ford CEO Jim Farley is issuing a wake-up call to America: the country’s economic strength depends not just on the innovation hotspots of Silicon Valley, but on the everyday industries that get things “moved, built, or fixed.” In a series of recent commentaries and interviews, Farley has been highlighting the mounting crisis in the “essential economy”—sectors like manufacturing, skilled trades, and infrastructure—and outlines how automation and artificial intelligence threaten to upend the white-collar workforce while blue-collar fields face unprecedented shortages. In late August, he authored an op-ed for Yahoo Finance outlining ways to close the essential economy’s productivity gap.

Farley’s warning is twofold: as artificial intelligence rapidly advances, up to half of all white-collar jobs in the United States could disappear within the next decade. He’s echoing warnings from other business leaders, like Amazon CEO Andy Jassy and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, who forecast major reductions in corporate and entry-level jobs as AI systems increasingly handle coding, legal, and administrative tasks. Farley points out that many entry pathways for young professionals—such as junior programming and clerical positions—are at high risk as AI tools become more capable, potentially raising unemployment rates to historic highs.

“There’s more than one way to the American Dream, but our whole education system is focused on four-year [college] education,” Farley said during the Aspen Ideas Festival this summer. “Hiring an entry worker at a tech company has fallen 50% since 2019. Is that really where we want all of our kids to go? Artificial intelligence is gonna replace literally half of all white-collar workers in the U.S.” 

The skilled trades gap

Contrast this with blue-collar and skilled trade sectors, where demand is booming but the labor supply is shrinking. Farley estimates the U.S. is already short around 600,000 factory workers and nearly half a million construction workers, with shortages projected to worsen as infrastructure and manufacturing investments grow. Despite a surge in U.S. manufacturing jobs—up nearly 3.8 million by 2033, according to Deloitte—the nation’s vocational education and apprenticeship programs remain outdated and underfunded.

Farley laments that America’s focus on four-year college degrees comes at the expense of trade careers—even though these jobs are now among the most secure and essential in a changing economy. He compares the U.S. unfavorably with countries like Germany, where apprenticeships and early skills training are the norm and help sustain a stable, highly trained workforce.

Ford’s response and Farley’s playbook

Faced with worker burnout and wage dissatisfaction, Farley—taking a lesson from Henry Ford’s historic wage-doubling move in 1914—pushed to convert temporary employees to full-time status faster, unlocking higher pay and benefits. This decision was both costly and controversial, but Farley insists it’s the only way to make industrial jobs attractive and financially viable for today’s youth. The move reflects broader disputes in the industry, including last year’s UAW strike, which highlighted deep worker resentment over slow wage growth and job insecurity.

While AI may decimate many office-based roles, Farley sees hope in the essential economy. He urges young Americans and policymakers to recognize skilled trades as a viable—and necessary—pathway to the American Dream. “We need a new mindset, one that recognizes the success and importance of this essential economy,” Farley recently told an audience.

He’s advocating for a national strategy: greater investment in vocational education, apprenticeship pipelines, and pro-trade policies to close the looming skills gap and secure the nation’s economic foundations. Only by revamping priorities across government, industry, and education, Farley argues, can the U.S. both cushion the blow of AI’s advance and restore vibrancy to the sectors that keep daily life running.

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing. 

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Jim Farley Ford 必需经济 Essential Economy 人工智能 AI 技术工人 Skilled Trades 职业教育 Vocational Education 美国经济 US Economy
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