Title: FiBS
1 Financing Further Professional Training - an
Overview about Models and Experiences
CEI Human Development Forum Dr. Dieter
Dohmen FiBS Institute for Education and
Socio-Economic Research and Consulting Prague,
November 10, 2006
D.Dohmen_at_fibs.eu
2 Content
- Introduction Some snapshots on training
participation
- Modes of and experiences with financing further
professional training - - Private funding and tax exemption
- - Training loans
- - Saving accounts
- - Individual Learning Accounts
- - Vouchers
- - Training funds/payroll taxes
3. Summary and Conclusion
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3 Snapshots (1/3)
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4 Snapshots (2/3)
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5 Snapshots (3/3)
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6 Summary of snapshots
Participation rates are very different among
countries and - are higher in Northern than
Southern and Eastern Europe - Are increasing
with education levels, i.e. are higher for
tertiary graduates than for upper secondary and
lower secondary graduates - Are least for 55-64
and slightly higher for 25-34 year olds than for
35-44 year olds gt There appears to be a strong
link with education, socio-economic background,
income and returns
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7 Private funding
- Private funding
- Advantages those with higher income (except
professional training, since participation
depends on it - (unless other financing opportunities are
available)
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8 Tax exemptions
- Effects depend on tax system
- Progressive taxes again favour those with higher
income since they gain more from tax deducations - Net costs are less for people with higher income
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9 Tax exemptions
- Effects depend on tax system
- Progressive taxes again favour those with higher
income since they gain more from tax deducations - Net costs are less for people with higher income
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10 Tax exemptions
- Effects depend on tax system
- Progressive taxes again favour those with higher
income since they gain more from tax deducations - Net costs are less for people with higher income
- Flat taxes are fairer since the reduction is the
same independent from income (unless you dont
pay taxes) - Tax deductibility is the major mode for
co-financing professional training in Germany -gt
indicates the progressive relation between income
and participation - Taxes exemptions dont reduce the liquidity
constraint - How to overcome them?
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11 Training Loans
- Training loans are usually not provided by the
market (or only for certain target groups) - Human capital does not provide any security, i.e.
interest rates would be very high - State guarantees are required, to keep interest
rates at acceptable levels - Even if, take-up rates are usually very small, as
e.g. the British experience shows for SMEs and
individuals - Risk-aversity could be a problem, particularly
for low-income and/or lowly educated groups
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12 Saving accounts
- Means to save money regularly on a bank account
especially for training - Takes time and foresight (if you are to save
especially for training) - Appears no instrument for costly programms, since
time requirement is to high (e.g. it takes more
than 6 years to finance 10.000, if interest
rate is 10 )
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13 Individual Learning accounts
- ILAs were applied e.g. in the UK
- State topped-up 150 if people paid 25 on a
bank account - Funds to be disbursed at registered institutes
- Goal 1 mln accounts within 2 years (in fact 2.6
mln/1yr) - budget line of 1.5 mln exceeded by far
- 22 of the participants had no training the year
before - 91 said their expectations were outstripped
- 54 were more interested in training than before
- 7.000 new institutes were established
- Programme closed down after one year for misuse
and quality problems
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14 Vouchers
- Can be applied to companies as well as
individuals - State co-funding for training
- Trainee selects training institute and delivers
the voucher - Institute gets reimbursed by the state/funding
agency - USA GI-Bill for war veterans for re-training and
integration - Belgium SMEs receive up to 400 vouchers of up to
30 50 of the costs are to be SME co-funded - Germany training vouchers for unemployed people
- Vouchers were applied in many developing
countries - Problems information and advice, limited usage
by low-educated people, fraud (to some extent)
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15 Training funds/payroll taxes
- 2 different modes revenue generation and
levy-grant or levy-exemption scheme - - are applied in many countries (e.g. France,
Malaysia, Netherlands) - Crucial question net-impact on company training?
- Gross numbers are often promising, but net effect
often low - Experience appears to be less promising as
expected (but room for debate) - SME pay but dont apply for refunding
- Revenue generation funds tend to establish
bureaucracies - However, sometimes it seems to have had an
starting effect (e.g. Taiwan)
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16 Summary and Conclusion
- No instrument is without problems!
- However, some modes appear to be performing
better than others (e.g. ILAs/Vouchers) - While others favour normal participation
patterns (tax exemption in progressive tax
systems) - gt Success and failure of a model depend on the
relationship between design and environment - Important co-factors information, advice and
quality assurance
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17 Financing Further Professional Training - an
Overview about Models and Experiences
CEI Human Development Forum Dr. Dieter
Dohmen FiBS Institute for Education and
Socio-Economic Research and Consulting Prague,
November 10, 2006
D.Dohmen_at_fibs.eu