Skills and jobs experts call for action now

Published: 4 February 2010 y., Thursday

Darbininkai
Immediate action is required to solve Europe's skills deficiencies and give Europeans a better chance of labour market success in the future, says an independent expert report published by the European Commission today. The report - 'New Skills for New Jobs: Action Now' - stresses the need to provide the right incentives for people to upgrade their skills, to better link education, training and work, to develop the right mix of skills, and to better anticipate those skills needed in the future. Today's report is one of the major outputs of the European Commission's 'New Skills for New Jobs' agenda and will be presented at a high level conference in Brussels today.

Vladimír Špidla, Commissioner for Employment said: "Improving people's skills will help us out of the crisis in the short term and prepare for sustainable economic success in the future".

Maroš Šefčovič, Commissioner for Education, Training, Culture and Youth, added "We need to break down the divisions between ‘education and training’ and ‘work’ so that people can make sure that their skills are suited to evolving labour market needs throughout their lives."

The nature of the problem:

At present, one in three Europeans of working age has few or no formal qualifications, making them 40% less likely to be employed than those with medium level qualifications.

The employment rate for those with high skill levels across the EU as a whole is 84%, for medium skill levels 70%, and for low skill levels it stands at 49%.

Those with low qualifications are also much less likely to upgrade their skills and follow lifelong learning.

Meanwhile, companies that train their staff are 2.5 times less likely to go out of business compared to those that do not, and

Education systems that provide adequate skills for all could increase GDP by as much as 10% in the long term.

Today's expert report provides concrete recommendations on how to solve Europe's skills deficiencies and is addressed to decision-makers at EU and national level, businesses, trade unions, education and training providers and employment services.

It calls for action in four main areas:

Provide better incentives for employers and individuals to up-skill, and investment in skills must be significant, smart and not just financial;

Open up the worlds of education and training by making education and training institutions more innovative and responsive to both learners' and employers' needs, and by developing relevant qualifications that focus on concrete learning outcomes;

O ffer a better mix of skills that is more suited to labour market needs;

Better anticipation of future skill needs.

The view of the experts is that each of these areas is inter-linked, and therefore all actions must be addressed together. Moreover, it is not the responsibility of just one stakeholder, but a concerted effort is needed from all involved.

The report points to the inconvenient truth that, despite progress in recent years, much of Europe is still not sufficiently skilled. Nearly one third of Europe’s population aged 25-64 have no, or only low, formal qualifications and only one quarter have high level qualifications. And those who are skilled do not always have the right skills that employers are looking for, thus creating mismatches on the labour market. A better mix of transversal and specific skills is required.

The problem is made more urgent by rising unemployment and the demographic challenges.

However, some 80 million job opportunities are expected to arise in the next decade, according to the latest projections by CEDEFOP, the EU's reference centre for vocational education and training. Among these jobs, almost 7 million jobs will be new, and most of those will require a more highly-skilled workforce.

Background

The New Skills New Jobs initiative was launched at EU level in December 2008 to build stronger bridges between the world of education and the world of work. In spring 2009, the European Commission appointed a group of experts on training, skills and employment from around the EU to provide independent advice on the further development of the initiative in the context of the EU's future economic reform strategy (Europe 2020).

 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

EBRD makes equity investment in Croatian geodetic company

The EBRD is making a €4 million equity investment in Geofoto, a Croatian geodetic company offering mapping, geodetic survey, photogrammetry, geoinformatics and aerial survey services, to support its drive to expand operations on international level. more »

Strong year - risk-adjusted profit up 22%

Nordea came out of 2009 in an even stronger position, despite one of the most challenging years for decades. Risk-adjusted profit increased 22% and our capital position and cost of funding are among the best in Europe. more »

Small business start-ups by the unemployed: deal agreed on funding

MEPs gave the green light on Thursday for EU funding to help Europe's unemployed start up small businesses. more »

Yemen: international efforts needed to prevent crisis escalation

MEPs are deeply concerned about the long-standing and growing presence of al-Qaeda, and the deteriorating security, social and economic problems in Yemen, which they think could destabilise neighbouring countries. more »

Africa: Fighting the Global Economic Crisis through Private Enterprise, Innovation and Integration

At the start of a new decade, Sub Saharan Africa is reeling from the effects of three major global crises – food, fuel and financial – that have reversed many of the economic achievements of the last 10 years and left some growth projections at levels below those of 30 years ago. more »

5th High-level Seminar of Central Banks in the East Asia-Pacific Region and the Euro Area

The 5th High-level Seminar of Central Banks in the East Asia-Pacific Region and the Euro Area was jointly organised by the European Central Bank and the Reserve Bank of Australia, in cooperation with the Hong Kong Monetary Authority. more »

EBRD and EFSE support micro and small businesses in Moldova

The EBRD and European Fund for Southeast Europe are boosting the availability of financing to private businesses in Moldova with a $10 million loan to ProCredit Bank in Moldova for on-lending to micro and small enterprises. more »

EBRD finances new shopping centre in Croatia

The EBRD is supporting the development of the retail infrastructure in Croatia with a €68 million loan to finance the construction of a modern shopping centre in Split, the second largest city in Croatia. more »

EBRD agrees to sell 15 percent stake in Swedbank’s Russian banking arm

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development has agreed to sell its 15 percent stake in OAO Swedbank Russia to its parent and major stakeholder, Sweden’s Swedbank AB, a move which would give it full ownership of its Russian subsidiary. more »

Ministers of Industry agree that the European Commission should promote a common strategy on electric cars

The Ministers of Industry took the first steps in San Sebastián today to make the electric vehicle a reality in Europe and agreed that European institutions, with the EC at the head, should lead a common strategy on electric vehicles. more »