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posted by martyb on Friday August 28 2015, @06:23AM   Printer-friendly
from the studying-what-to-study dept.

The article comes out of the Australian press, but unless there's something truly unique about the Australian job market, it's almost certainly true elsewhere as well: a recent study shows more than half of young Australians are receiving college education to persue careers that will soon no longer exist. Thank robotics, industry consolidation, and the nature of the markets for the shrinking number of ways you will some day be able to earn a living.

There's a flip side to the debate, of course: there are certainly new things coming that haven't even been invented yet, that will provide job opportunities. But the trick is positioning yourself appropriately to take advantage of the new chances.

The not-for-profit group, which works with young Australians to create social change, says the national curriculum is stuck in the past and digital literacy, in particular, needs to be boosted. Foundation chief executive Jan Owen says young people are not prepared for a working life that could include five career changes and an average of 17 different jobs.

She says today's students will be affected by three key economic drivers: automation, globalisation and collaboration. "Many jobs and careers are disappearing because of automation," Ms Owen said. "The second driver is globalisation — a lot of different jobs that we're importing and exporting. And then thirdly collaboration which is all about this new sharing economy."

How does one future-proof his/her life and career?


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  • (Score: 2) by aristarchus on Friday August 28 2015, @06:01PM

    by aristarchus (2645) on Friday August 28 2015, @06:01PM (#229095) Journal

    You need the post-scarcity resources first.

    I think the claim is that we are already there, and the problem is artificial scarcity produced by such things as market inefficiencies, the profit motive, and intellectual property claims.

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