By Jana
Foust, MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- The future of the rural Southern workforce show
signs of hope, but rural development specialists temper hope
with caution as the new millennium approaches. "The
1990s have shown a significant migration of people to the
rural South that have higher levels of education and
income," said Dr. Bo Beaulieu, director of the Southern
Rural Development Center headquartered at Mississippi State
University. "More
and more people are being attracted to the rural South
because of the natural amenities that it has to offer,"
Beaulieu said. "Some come for a higher quality of life;
others come to find work." Between
1990 and 1996, about 1.6 million more Americans moved away
from the city than to it and another 227,000 moved to rural
areas from other countries. This information is reported in
"Ready or Not? The Rural South and Its Workforce," a joint
publication of the SRDC and the Tennessee Valley Authority
Rural Studies Program at the University of
Kentucky. In
addition to more well-educated people moving to the rural
South, lower numbers of young people are leaving for urban
areas. "Some of
the best and brightest students are returning after
graduation," Beaulieu said. "This offers hope for new
leadership in the future. Technology is offering them ways
to work without being strapped to a job located
elsewhere." Under-education
is linked to a lack of advancement in the workforce, the
report said. Low skill labor that is offered by many
part-time positions often makes it hard to move ahead in the
workforce. "Many
people become entrenched in the low skill labor force and
find it hard to climb the career ladder," Beaulieu
said. The gap
of racial inequality between education levels also is
lessening, the report said. Dr. Leif Jensen, associate
professor of sociology at Pennsylvania State University and
a contributor to the report, agrees. "Southern
education levels in general have increased recently, and the
difference in high school graduation levels between white
and black students is declining," Jensen said. Even
though conditions for the rural Southern workforce are
improving, Jensen said analysts should use caution in
focusing on the positive without considering some
negatives. "We
still have to view the skill level of the workforce with
concern as well as with hope," Jensen said. "Though the
future shows promise, many laborers in the rural South
remain underemployed. This includes the working poor, those
working full-time for wages barely above poverty levels and
those working part-time because of a lack of full-time
positions." In
addition to underemployment, rural Southern workers also
make only 74 cents for every dollar earned by workers in
urban areas. "The
wage gap between rural and urban areas is a critical issue
with no easy solution," Jensen said. "The gap
occurs because of a combination of limited education and the
industries seeking low wage workers," Beaulieu
said. Printed
copies of the report are available from the TVA Rural
Studies Program by calling (606) 257-1872. The report also
can be accessed online as an Adobe Acrobat file at
http://www.rural.org. Released:
Sept. 27, 1999
Community
News
Rural Experts
Hopeful About Future Workforce
Southern Rural Development Center
Contact: Dr. Bo Beaulieu, (662) 325-3207
Visit: DAFVM
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