Yes.
Given the context, which is around employability, I would just caution us against equating a person's worth with their ability to be in the paid workforce. For a certain percentage of our co-citizens, being in the paid workforce is not possible: perhaps they're raising a child, caring for someone aged, have a sick person in the family, or have a particular situation that militates against that at a particular stage or period of their life. While I completely agree with the comments that have been made, I would just want to caution against speaking about the worth of a person only in terms of ability to be paid in the workforce.
I'm a very socialistic person by nature, and I truly believe that housewives should be paid and that people who are caring for sick and elderly people should be paid and should have pensions, etc. As a member of the women's movement, I have been fighting for these things all my life, but I felt I needed to say that at this particular moment.