CONFERENCES
ISRAEL NEWS
HEALTH & WELLNESS
WORLD NEWS
MIDDLE EAST
BUSINESS & INNOVATION
OPINION
JP STORE
Login
Login
Subscribe
JPOST DIGITAL LIBRARY
HOME PAGE
BUSINESS & INNOVATION
OPINION
REAL ESTATE LISTINGS
ALIYAH
JERUSALEM POST CONFERENCE
PREMIUM
JP STORE
Categories
ISRAEL NEWS
WORLD NEWS
MIDDLE EAST
ARAB ISRAELI CONFLICT
US POLITICS
DIASPORA
OPINION
PODCAST
JUDAISM
KABBALAH
CHRISTIAN WORLD
HEALTH & WELLNESS
SCIENCE
LAW
ARCHAEOLOGY
OMG
ENVIRONMENT & CLIMATE CHANGE
FOOD & RECIPES
JERUSALEM POST EN ESPANOL
HISTORY
SPONSORED CONTENT
ADVERTISE WITH US
TERMS OF USE
PRIVACY POLICY
CONTACT US
CANCEL SUBSCRIPTION
CUSTOMER SERVICE
ABOUT US
Jerusalem Post
/
Opinion
Labor shortages in the hi-tech industry are not inevitable - opinion
The government and the hi-tech industry must act urgently to utilize the existing labor force from academic institutions in Israel, in order to reduce the shortage of engineers.
IT SHOULD BE noted that in the training process in the core technology areas, such as chip design, algorithms, software, artificial intelligence, and cyber, is long – there are no shortcuts.
(photo credit:
HADAS PARUSH/FLASH90
)
By
FREDDY GABBAY
SEPTEMBER 11, 2021 15:23
See more on
high tech
|
employment
|
Engineering
RECOMMENDED STORIES
Admitting defeat? Why Hamas officials say the terror group 'lost control' of Gaza
JULY 7, 2025
'Security situation has collapsed': Hamas has lost 80% of its control over Gaza Strip
JULY 7, 2025
Reporter's Notebook: 'Post' meets with top Hebron sheikh who wants to pull out of PA
JULY 6, 2025
IDF cyber chief, retired Iran strategy head piloted fighter jets striking Iran
JULY 6, 2025
Hot Opinion
War doesn't end on the battlefield: Israel must better support veterans with PTSD
By
JPOST EDITORIAL
Israel's midnight strategist: How IDF chief Eyal Zamir rewired the doctrine on Iran
By
ZVIKA KLEIN
,
YONAH JEREMY BOB
As thousands stay away, Ethiopian Israelis pay a heavy price in Gaza war
By
YAAKOV KATZ
Can Donald Trump win a Nobel Peace Prize?
By
AMOTZ ASA-EL