you are actually confirming what I already said. Companies will incur these costs anyway. People will leave jobs anyway. The point remains that those who study get a certification and upskilling experience with good people, and can get jobs in other places. The post is mostly specific to India, not USA. Upskilling is a serious issue in India, and it can also be made into a CSR activity by companies which spend their CSR money on non-sensical things just to save taxes. There can be n number of economic models for this, with central idea remaining the same--small monetary contributions which inspires ppl to actually LEARN. Not everybody who goes to school in a village learns. Enough studies have been done on this in developmental economics. Akshaya Patra's success is basically this. They give free meals to students in schools. This improves attendance of students in schools & relieves the stress of the parents. Capitalism doesn't need to be exploitative. It can be contributing beyond just paying taxes as well.
you are actually confirming what I already said. Companies will incur these costs anyway. People will leave jobs anyway. The point remains that those who study get a certification and upskilling experience with good people, and can get jobs in other places. The post is mostly specific to India, not USA. Upskilling is a serious issue in India, and it can also be made into a CSR activity by companies which spend their CSR money on non-sensical things just to save taxes. There can be n number of economic models for this, with central idea remaining the same--small monetary contributions which inspires ppl to actually LEARN. Not everybody who goes to school in a village learns. Enough studies have been done on this in developmental economics. Akshaya Patra's success is basically this. They give free meals to students in schools. This improves attendance of students in schools & relieves the stress of the parents. Capitalism doesn't need to be exploitative. It can be contributing beyond just paying taxes as well.
The point is how you look at something. If you think everything is exploitative, there is no discussion.