Guy Berger

Guy Berger, Ph.D., serves as the Director of Economic Research at The Burning Glass Institute since January 2024. Previously, Guy held the position of Principal Economist at LinkedIn from August 2015 to October 2023, where responsibilities included leading a team in developing key economic reports and models, advising senior leadership on macroeconomic impacts, and engaging with media and clients. Guy also contributed to the State of New Jersey Future of Work Task Force from September 2019 to December 2021, and held various economist roles at RBS Global Banking & Markets, Bank of America, and the Congressional Budget Office. Academic credentials include a Ph.D. in Economics from Yale University and a B.A. in Economics and Mathematics from UC San Diego.

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San Francisco, United States

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The Burning Glass Institute

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Situated at the intersection of learning and work, the Burning Glass Institute advances data-driven research and practice on the future of work and of workers. We work with educators, employers, and policymakers to develop solutions that build mobility, opportunity, and equity through skills. Today’s job market is being reshaped by unprecedented dynamism, with significant implication for our society. 30% of the average job’s skills have been replaced over the past decade, challenging higher education to keep up and threatening industry with the prospect of major talent disruption. How can companies and communities ensure that the workforce they have can be the workforce they need for the future? In this context, the Burning Glass Institute’s work is increasingly urgent. Industry suffers severe talent shortages even as workers remain stuck on a treadmill of low-wage employment. Companies struggle to attract diverse workers even as talent pools go underleveraged. Colleges and universities often fail to align their programs with labor market demand, leading to disappointing outcomes for graduates and poor returns on education and training investments for students and the public alike. Meanwhile, the sizeable opportunity and yawning need to support workers in acquiring new skills throughout their careers go unaddressed amidst declining higher education enrollments. The impact of these problems extends beyond individual employers or institutions. The inability to predict and build pipelines for future talent needs challenges the competitiveness of regions, sectors, and nations. Through our expertise in mining new datasets for actionable insight, the Burning Glass Institute’s research draws attention to pressing problems and frames the potential for new approaches. We also work to put innovative ideas into practice. Through project-based engagement, focused working groups, and data sharing collectives, we bring forward solutions that are high-impact and replicable.


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