As we said earlier, there is no automatic solution. To begin with, that is what we tell young people about their career choices. It is the effect of structural factors in the school system. Our companies and all sorts of people are doing a lot of work every day in the schools. This has to be supplemented by a public message, and the country's leaders have a role to play in getting the message out. That could go so far as providing assistance for training.
If we had support for apprenticeships, which is offered for jobs in the old economy, those incentives would attract young people into these careers. They know that someone is trying to develop jobs in those fields and that an apprenticeship program is going to make it much more certain that they will be able to find a job.
Measures of that kind, which have an impact on the knowledge economy, are needed, in order to have the same effect. This is the kind of thing the government can do.