Manufacturing Jobs That Can't Be Automated — And Why Employers Can't Fill Them
Somewhere on a factory floor right now, a machinist is making a call that isn't in the manual. The part just came off the machine looking fine — the dimensions are within tolerance, and the surface finish is acceptable. But the machinist picks it up anyway, turns it over, and finds something: a subtle warp that will cause the assembly to fail under load. It won't happen today or tomorrow. But it may happen three weeks, three months, or three years from now, at the customer's facility, at precisely the moment when it counts the most. So the machinist flags it, adjusts the setup, and moves on. Those few minutes don't show up in the statistics. A...