Photo credit: NSDC |
Skill
mismatches are arguably growing rather than shrinking. Today, more than
one-tenth of 15 to 24 year olds worldwide are functionally illiterate. Without
numeracy and literacy skills, the prospects of improving employment
opportunities and earnings, whether in agriculture or in urban settings, are
thin.
Employment
opportunities are seen to increase the demand for education, which systems then
have to meet. Often privilege in access to jobs distorts the signals. It hurts
and discourages, rather than encourages, the building of skills. Thus policy
interventions should focus on ensuring that signals are adequately transmitted
and incentives are provided to continue skill accumulation by the young and
those of working age alike. In India, informing rural women about job
opportunities led to increased schooling for girls and delayed marriage and
childbearing for women.
The
report points out that though the straightforward response to skill mismatches
would be for private firms or individuals to upgrade skills through further
education or training—but several factors act as constraints like the market
constraints. For example, lack of information about employment opportunities,
transportation costs, or housing market failures may be the real reasons why
workers do not take available jobs. Small firms and farms seldom have the
necessary funds for training and education.
Institutional
failures often end up replacing market failures. But many countries are trying
to create oversight entities, to separate quality control and management of
providers from financing. In India, the National Skills Development Strategy is
based on the principle that the institutions in charge of training,
certification, and accreditation should be strictly separated. On the negative side,
scattered responsibilities across many Central Ministries, distance from the
private sector and slow response to rapidly changing skill needs are some of
the problems which continue to plague such systems.
The
report emphasises that just as skills are important for jobs, the reverse is
true as well. Many technical and social skills can be built through experience
in the workplace. Apprenticeship programs, fostering the integration of
education and learning through jobs, exist in various shapes around the world.
The report suggests that informal apprenticeship can be strengthened through
its gradual integration into national training systems. In France, Germany, and
the Netherlands has a dual system credited with fast and structured employment
integration. “But the dual system requires more than the right economic
incentives—it is based on a social contract between employers, trade unions,
and government.” Private sector commitment, including financing of training and
continuation even in times of economic downturns, is fundamental.
On-the-job
training is consistently found to go hand-in-hand with higher labour earnings
and productivity increases, even more so in developing than in industrial
countries. But only a fraction of workers have access to it; those with less
education and those working in smaller and informal enterprises seldom have the
opportunity to benefit from training. Inequitable access and poor quality are
key constraints in many countries and the reach of Technical and vocational
education in rural areas is often very limited.
In
countries like Korea, industrial projections of manpower supply have taken a
backseat to the country’s new initiatives emphasizing quality and relevance of
education and skills development. The Korea University of Technology and
Education (KUT) established the Bridge Model, a three-way partnership involving
a single major enterprise and clusters of small and medium enterprises (SMEs)
that serve as its main subcontractors. The major enterprise contributes technical
knowledge, the SMEs bring in the employees to be trained, and the University
supplies the teaching facilities and content.
Today
the focus is gradually shifting from merely ensuring an adequate supply of
skills to delivering demand-responsive, quality- skills development programs.
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