macro

Noncognitive Skills Lag in Next‑Gen Workforce

FC
Fazen Capital Research·
6 min read
1,573 words
Key Takeaway

Reem Raouda studied 200+ children (CNBC, Mar 29, 2026); WEF projects 44% of core skills will change by 2027—urgent implications for productivity and long-term returns.

Context

A recent profile in CNBC (Mar 29, 2026) reported that child psychologist Reem Raouda studied more than 200 children and identified self-regulation and executive function as the single most neglected skill set parents are failing to teach. That finding arrives against a backdrop of structural change in labour markets where cognitive and technical competencies are evolving rapidly: the World Economic Forum's Future of Jobs Report (Oct 2023) estimated that by 2027 some 44% of workers' core skills will have changed, accelerating demand for adaptability and interpersonal proficiencies. For institutional investors, these developments are material to long-term returns because human capital quality—particularly soft or noncognitive skills—affects productivity, turnover, training costs and ultimately company margins.

The connection between early childhood skill formation and future labour-market outcomes is well established in academic literature, and the CNBC sample size of 200+ children provides a contemporary, anecdotal anchor for those dynamics. While the CNBC piece is not an academic paper, it reinforces themes from cross-disciplinary research showing that executive function predicts school attainment and employment stability. From a macro view, labour-force resilience to technological change now depends not only on reskilling adults but on the foundational competencies cultivated in childhood and adolescence.

For pension funds, sovereign wealth managers and other long-horizon asset owners, the distribution of noncognitive skills across cohorts is potentially a structural risk. If a significant share of the incoming workforce lacks self-regulation and collaborative problem-solving, firms will face higher onboarding costs, more volatile productivity per employee and a compression of returns on human-capital intensive business models. This is not short-term noise; it is an input to scenario analysis for productivity growth and labour-cost inflation over multi-decade horizons.

Data Deep Dive

The CNBC article (Mar 29, 2026) supplies one concrete data point: Reem Raouda's study observed over 200 children and concluded that parents prioritize academic achievement over teaching self-regulation. That single datum should be read alongside broader, systematic evidence. The World Economic Forum's Future of Jobs Report (Oct 2023) quantified technological and structural change by forecasting that 44% of core skills across jobs will transform by 2027, implying rising value for flexibility and soft skills even as technical requirements shift.

From the macro statistics side, U.S. labour-market projections illustrate how demand shifts across sectors. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' 2022–32 employment projections (published 2023) showed above-average growth in occupations requiring interpersonal competencies—healthcare, education and specialized services—while automation tends to compress roles dominated by routine cognitive tasks. These sectoral projections translate to reallocation pressures: employers in fast-growing, people-intensive sectors will face a steeper bill for training or wage premia if incoming cohorts are deficient in noncognitive skills.

Institutional investors should also note the quantifiable costs tied to skill gaps. Corporate training budgets climbed materially after the pandemic; a 2024 industry survey indicated that global corporate learning spend rose by mid-single digits year-over-year as firms sought to close skills gaps (industry reports, 2024). When soft-skills deficits are concentrated, firms report slower time-to-productivity and higher churn—each measurable against operating margins. For public and private equity investors, this manifests in lower return-on-capital employed where workforce quality is a constraining input.

Sector Implications

Labour-intensive sectors will be most sensitive to deficits in noncognitive skills. Healthcare, education, hospitality and social services rely heavily on interpersonal coordination, emotional regulation and situational judgement. For example, a hospital system facing a cohort with lower baseline self-regulation will see longer training curves for nurses and allied health staff, translating into higher agency staffing costs and potential service-quality volatility. That dynamic affects credit risk for high-leverage hospital operators and alters valuation multiples for high-margin, people-centric businesses.

Technology companies are not immune: high-growth tech firms frequently cite soft skills—communication, teamwork and adaptability—as bottlenecks to scaling cross-border teams. Even in AI-heavy firms, the marginal productivity of technical contributors depends on collaboration and effective project management. Conversely, capital-light, asset-management businesses that can automate core tasks see less short-term exposure but may face client-service risks if advisory staff lack emotional intelligence for retention of institutional clients.

From a regional perspective, demographic differences matter. Economies with ageing populations (Japan, parts of Europe) will have higher reliance on the quality of younger cohorts to sustain GDP per capita growth; a skills shortfall in those cohorts would exert more visible macro drag. Emerging markets with large youth populations risk elevated underemployment if formal education emphasizes testable knowledge over behavioural competencies. Cross-country comparisons therefore feed into sovereign risk assessments and long-duration allocations.

Risk Assessment

The primary risk is a persistent human-capital mismatch that elevates labour costs and suppresses productivity growth relative to baseline forecasts. If noncognitive skill deficits are widespread, central banks may face more persistent inflationary pressure through higher wages in service sectors and reduced productivity offsetting technological gains. That scenario would have implications for discount rates applied to long-duration assets and for liability-driven investors indexing future cash flows to inflation assumptions.

Operationally, firms that underinvest in onboarding and internal culture risk higher employee turnover and lower lifetime value per hire. For private equity sponsors, this raises the bar for operational due diligence: identifying whether portfolio management plans to underwrite behavioural training or to price-in higher HR costs is now essential. Equity analysts should therefore incorporate soft-skill metrics—employee engagement scores, training spend per FTE, time-to-productivity—into forecasts rather than treating them as qualitative footnotes.

Policy risk also arises. Public-sector responses to perceived skill shortages could include mandated training subsidies or incentives for early-childhood programmes, altering the fiscal landscape. Such interventions can be favorable for long-term GDP but create transitional costs. Institutional investors should monitor policy moves in key markets as potential drivers of sector rotation or changes in sovereign credit profiles.

Fazen Capital Perspective

Fazen Capital views the reported deficiency in noncognitive skills as an underpriced structural factor for long-duration portfolios. Contrarian to the prevailing focus on adult reskilling and high-tech automation, the highest marginal return on human-capital investment may come from earlier interventions and company-level behavioural investments. Early-life competencies like self-regulation are low-volatility predictors of later employment stability; funds that incorporate human-capital quality into valuations can exploit mispricing where markets underappreciate these long-term inputs.

Practically, this suggests shifting part of the analytical lens. In public-equity selection, Fazen favors businesses with explicit, measurable employee-development programmes and low reliance on temporary labour—characteristics that mitigate the risk of cohort skill shortfalls. In private markets, Fazen's due-diligence checklist includes assessments of onboarding duration, nontechnical training curricula and management's capacity to inculcate culture—metrics often omitted from conventional models. More broadly, sovereign and pension portfolio managers should consider exposure to regions where education policy demonstrates a credible emphasis on socio-emotional learning.

For readers seeking deeper reading on the intersection of skills, productivity and asset performance, our long-form insights catalogue provides frameworks for integrating human-capital signals into macro and equity analysis ([topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en)). We also maintain white papers on workforce-driven inflation scenarios and corporate margin sensitivity to labour quality ([topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en)).

Outlook

Over the next decade, the interplay between technological adoption and foundational human skills will be a primary determinant of realised productivity gains. If the trend highlighted by Reem Raouda's study—parents prioritising grades over self-regulation—persists at scale, investors should anticipate a flatter productivity profile and higher structural labour costs in service-dominant economies. Conversely, targeted interventions that improve noncognitive skills at scale would be a deflationary productivity multiplier, increasing effective labour supply and lowering the marginal cost of service delivery.

Scenarios matter. In a base case where policy and corporate investments in behavioural skills keep pace with technological change, the transition to a more automated economy will be smoother and capital returns will concentrate in scalable tech and asset-light businesses. In a downside case with entrenched soft-skill deficits, we would expect higher wage inflation in human-capital intensive sectors, pressure on margins and greater dispersion in returns between firms that can internalize training and those that cannot.

Investors should therefore build contingency analyses into their models, stress-testing revenues and operating margins against plausible ranges for onboarding times, churn rates and productivity per FTE. Equally, engagement with portfolio companies on measurable human-capital KPIs can be a low-cost, high-ROIC way to reduce idiosyncratic and systemic risk.

FAQ

Q: How historically persistent are noncognitive skill effects on earnings and employment? A: Longitudinal research indicates that early-life socio-emotional skills predict adult labour-market attachment and earnings for decades; interventions in preschool and early school years have documented durable impacts in randomized studies. For investors, this implies cohort effects that unfold over many years rather than quarterly cycles.

Q: What practical corporate metrics can investors request to quantify exposure to a soft-skill shortfall? A: Useful indicators include average time-to-productivity (days), voluntary turnover rates by tenure cohort, training spend per employee (USD), and employee engagement or NPS scores. Cross-referencing these metrics with margin volatility can reveal the sensitivity of cashflows to human-capital quality.

Q: Are there policy levers that could materially change the outlook within an investment horizon? A: Yes. National scaling of early-childhood education that prioritizes executive function—if implemented at scale—can shift labour-market supply characteristics within one to two decades. Shorter-horizon policy levers, such as firm-level training subsidies or incentives for apprenticeships, can reduce adjustment costs within 3–5 years.

Bottom Line

Evidence from a study of 200+ children (CNBC, Mar 29, 2026) and global skills forecasts (WEF, Oct 2023) points to noncognitive skills as a material, underpriced determinant of future productivity and corporate margins. Institutional investors should integrate measurable human-capital indicators into valuation and risk frameworks.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

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