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Reply to "Help - Former USAID contractor -- zero interviews in a year"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Sorry but it sounds like his skills either aren't there, aren't unique, or aren't transferrable. The problem with a lot of these USAID folks is there's a lot of talk about deliverables and managing programs but it's a lot of words. [/quote] No, the problem is that the job market is terrible and the government has poured gasoline on it by dumping 300k extra workers into it all at once. Very few industries or sectors have added any meaningful number of jobs in the past year other than healthcare. [/quote] If healthcare added all these job why aren't the people who prevent infectious diseases in Africa or stopped ebola working in that field. It sounds like the government propped up the 300k extra workers and they don't really have marketable skills. [/quote] Because the jobs in healthcare are in the provision of healthcare services (doctors, NPs, nurses, hospital and office administrative staff), not in public health (got cut!) or infectious diseases. It sounds like you have no idea what you’re talking about, which is unsurprising.[/quote] That makes no sense. Doctors, nurses, nurse practitioners work in public health and infectious diseases. Just face it. Usaid people were not in healthcare. They were paper pushers. [/quote] Of course it makes sense. Your reading skills are just terrible. I never said USAID people were in healthcare. I specifically said they weren’t in healthcare. The people in healthcare getting jobs are doctors, nurses, hospital administrators. USAID people were not that, and no one ever said they were. Yes, there are doctors and nurses in public health and infectious diseases. But the type of work USAID did on those issues—which were projects and logistics—would not fall under healthcare as classified by the jobs data. Which is why your earlier point of “If healthcare added all these job why aren't the people who prevent infectious diseases in Africa or stopped ebola working in that field” is actually the point that makes no sense. The work USAID people did is not the type of work where jobs in the US have been added in the past year, which has been my point all along.[/quote] You are just reinforcing the op's point. If the usaid type of work "projects and logistics" or contracts and deliverables or whatever other vague terms that have been used were actual useful skills then these people would be working. Instead it's a pyramid scheme of managing and supervising and auditing the people doing the actual work. [/quote] I am not at all surprised that you have never heard of project management or logistics, or that you think dealing with contracts and managing is part of a pyramid scheme instead of “actual work.” These are absolutely foreign concepts down in your troll hole. Please enlighten us on your deep skills and expertise in doing “actual work.” I’m sure it’s some low-level, menial bulls[i]hit.[/quote]
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