It's too late to go back, the skills are gone. Outdated? Depends on your perspective I guess.
My barista point is being ironic. Most service jobs are transitional, medium term. For the kids that wanted to leave hs to work with their hands and go into a supporting trade, a lot of that opportunity is now gone. For those lesser skilled kids that fit into production type roles, those jobs are gone.
This service industry you speak of isn't for everyone.
Not everyone can go to uni, nor should they, yet we seem to hold it in high regard now as the deafault path. Result is kids with no idea what to do and a huge hecs debt.
Yep I disagree with you holding up two small time examples of "smart" manufacturers. There is no dumb manufacturing, it all requires engineering, trades, and skills. We had that, and it was left to rot after removal of tariffs
Smart was the term you had originally used so I continued but then I changed to more widely used high-tech and low-tech as I think this is more accurate of the point I were trying to make and doesn't have the derogatory undertones which I didn't intend.
I think there are still quite a few hands on roles available especially in the services sector for the kids you talk about, people used to do a lot of work around the house them self whereas now they get trades into do it for them, things like painting, tiling, decks, extensions, car services, replacing tap washers, mowing lawns, landscaping, adding extra power points, renovations in general, cleaning etc. have become a lot more likely to be outsourced than done DIY, this I at least partly attribute to the reduction in the price of good's allowing people to increase what they spend on services.
I agree with you with your point on people going to Uni, there seems to be plenty of pointless and over subscribed degrees.
There is still need for workers to do manual jobs, just not so much in low-tech manufacturing.