Title: Skills for new jobs in challenging times
1(No Transcript)
2Skills for new jobs in challenging times
- Aviana Bulgarelli
- Director, Cedefop
3Thinking aheada main challenge in the downturn
- The crisis reinforces the need to
- Make a case for jobs and skillsthat are key to
competitiveness and growth - Develop a culture of anticipation and match
skills and jobs
4Thinking beyond recovery
- Global economic crisis not the only challenge
- Demographic trends fewer young labour market
entrants,? more older people will need to
broaden or upgrade their skills ( white
jobs and skills) - Climate change green jobs and green skills
across occupations and sectors - Long-term trends matter for education/training
and employment - New skills for new jobs initiative a systemic
approach - Forecasting skill needs indicates trends ?
can help to think ahead
5Towards knowledge-intensive occupations
EU-25 Negative scenario
6but also job polarisation
- Increasing employment growth and share of
- professionals, technicians and managers but also
- elementary occupations
- Decreasing employment share of
- medium-level routine jobs in manufacturing and
offices - technological change affects these jobs more
than offshoring - lower and higher occupations less affected as
typically non-routine
7More medium and high level jobs in the future
Employment trends, 1996-2020, by qualification
EU-25
Negative scenario
8Changing shares of qualification needs in sectors
Selected examples
EU-25
Negative scenario
9Medium-skilled workers remain basis of European
economy Labour force supply trends, 2000-2020,
by qualification
Level of qualification
NB Labour force aged 25 and more. EU-25 without
Malta, plus Norway
10Common trends in qualification structures across
countries
Changing qualification structure of the labour
force in countries, 2007 and 2020. NB Labour
force aged 25 and more. EU-25 without Malta, plus
Norway
11Younger womens qualifications surpassing
mensLabour force supply, 2007 and 2020, by age,
gender and qualification
NB Labour force aged 25 and more. EU-25 without
Malta, plus Norway
12Is Europe on the right track ?
- Europe seems on track to raise its
qualifications profile - more Europeans acquiring high and medium-level
qualifications - fewer low-qualified Europeans
- Younger cohorts the best qualified ever
- Women better qualified than men
- BUT no room for complacency
- Still too many young people without sufficient
basic skills - Low employment rates of women (waste of talent)
- Do the actual skills match labour market needs?
- Will demand grow at same pace and bring good
quality jobs for all?
13Skills for recovery
- Crisis anticipates structural changes
- Crisis impacts on composition of jobs and skills
needs and supply - Risk of skills shortages and imbalances
- Risk of skills depreciation for unemployed and
job seekers - Skills upgrading helps mitigate employment impact
of the crisis - Skills prepare future economic growth
-
14Measures in VET to overcome the crisis
- Efforts to keep people in employment, ease
transitions - additional public funding for short-term measures
inenterprises/sectors that are hit hardest to
support training/upskilling - training component of flexicurity
- shorter working hours combined with training
- more extensive use of existing/planned measures
- e.g. extended educational leave,support to young
persons to stay longer in school - training in areas where there is a shortage of
workforce - apprenticeship places
15Measures in VET to overcome the crisis
- SMEs training of employers and managers
- wider partnerships social partner
agreementscooperation of employers and VET
providers to target offer to needs social
partners, public employment services, education
and training - focus on specific skills and key competences
- focus on quality of training to enhance
employability - Fil rouge
- Focus on training and skills needs
16VET as an opportunity to drive recovery
- Establish comprehensive systems of skill
anticipation, in partnership with all actors on
the labour market - Better links, coherence and synergy between
employment, education and training, social and
economic policies and tools - Consistent links and partnership between
education/training,companies and labour market
actors - National qualification frameworks based on
learning outcomes as learning outcomes bridge job
requirements with skills provisions
17VET as an opportunity to drive recovery
- Use better peoples potential focus on what
people know andcan do - identify and give value to the skills and
competences people have certify them and link
into qualification frameworks - guidance to relevant training and/or better match
jobs and skills - Balance between specific and generic skills
important for recovery - Explore new financing instruments to increase
incentives for people and employers to train - Understand training as long term investment for a
skilled workforce
18Thank you for your attention!
Contact details for more information Cedefops
skill needs team Cedefop www.cedefop.europa.eu