President Donald Trump released a plan on Aug. 12 that aims to transform the federal government’s approach to workforce development.
America’s Talent Strategy: Building the Workforce for the Golden Age outlines how the Trump administration proposes to deliver workforce investments to meet the talent needs of employers, empower more Americans to access high-wage careers, and reindustrialize the economy.
“This strategy lays out a comprehensive plan to address the workforce needs of American companies, integrate existing workforce development systems to maximize efficiency and effectiveness, provide accountability for workforce training programs, upskill incumbent American workers, and develop alternatives to 4-year college degrees,” according to the published document.
Five Strategic Pillars
The plan rests on five strategic pillars: expanding work-based learning models; connecting people to in-demand jobs; streamlining federal workforce development programs; improving transparency and accountability for federally funded workforce programs; and ensuring the U.S. workforce is prepared to work with artificial intelligence.
Employers can be expected to co-design training, validate skills, and guide investments as the plan rolls out.
Addressing Workforce Development Gaps
The Trump administration said that relying on the “college-for-all” model to prepare the workforce has failed to meet the needs of both employers and workers. Because of this, employers lack reliable talent pipelines, workers are disconnected from high-wage career paths, workforce development programs are fragmented across the government, and AI is transforming work faster than the system can adapt, according to the plan document.
More specifically, the Trump administration proposes to:
- Expand registered apprenticeships.
- Modernize career and technical education programs.
- Work with industry to better align business needs with work-based learning.
- Prioritize outreach to long-term unemployed and underemployed populations.
- Focus on building re-employment pathways for veterans and individuals who were formerly incarcerated.
- Upgrade workforce data systems.
- Remove occupational licensing requirements that restrict worker mobility.
- Identify credentials aligned with industry demand.
- Consolidate multiple workforce programs into a single, more cohesive system.
- Prioritize AI literacy and skill development, support the creation of regional employer-led AI training and innovation centers, and deploy AI-focused pilots to drive rapid retraining to meet the pace of labor market disruption driven by the technology.
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