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OECD Skills Strategy Translating better skills into better economic and social outcomes Israel Accession Seminar 22-23 November 2011 Deborah Roseveare.

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Presentation on theme: "OECD Skills Strategy Translating better skills into better economic and social outcomes Israel Accession Seminar 22-23 November 2011 Deborah Roseveare."— Presentation transcript:

1 OECD Skills Strategy Translating better skills into better economic and social outcomes Israel Accession Seminar 22-23 November 2011 Deborah Roseveare

2 2 Skills matter for individuals  because skills have an increasing impact on labour market outcomes and social participation for economies  because failure to ensure a good skills match has:  short- term consequences (skills shortages)  longer-term effects on:  economic growth  equality of opportunities

3 3 Better skills do not automatically translate into higher incomes and higher productivity Success with converting skills into jobs, growth and social outcomes depends on whether  we know what skills matter and drive outcomes  the right mix of skills is being taught and learned in effective, equitable and efficient ways  labour markets and societies fully utilise skills  governments build effective skills systems and strong coalitions with the social partners to find sustainable approaches to who should pay for what, when and where

4 4 The world has changed  A dramatic expansion in higher education  Younger cohorts are more highly educated  Geographical distribution has shifted towards China Age groupTertiary qualified aged 25-34 years81 million aged 55-64 years39 million %25-34 years55-64 years United States35.820.5 Japan12.410.9 China 6.918.3

5 Many systems have done well in getting more people to higher qualifications But qualifications are not the same as skills... …because we continue to learn after obtaining a degree… …and because we lose skills that we do not use

6 OECD Skills Strategy  Integrates work on skills across the Organisation  Supports countries in developing better skills policies for economic growth and social inclusion  Defines three key areas of focus:  developing and maintaining the stock of skills  optimising the productive use of a population’s skills  strengthening skills systems

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8 8 Developing and maintaining stock of skills

9 9 Producing an appropriate mix of skills  What are the drivers of current and future demand of skills/competencies?  Which instruments ensure responsiveness of education provision to labour market demand?  Which competencies should be developed?  How can access to education and training throughout lifetime be optimised?  What is the impact of migration and international labour mobility on skills formation systems?

10 10 Key findings on skills supply and demand  Labour demand characteristics more important than labour supply characteristics in explaining earnings differentials  Skills matter but only if they are required by the job  Extent of text-based processing tasks at work is among the strongest determinants of earnings and skill formation  Skill formation also depends on work tasks and work organisation

11 11 Optimising use of skills Under-utilisation of skills  mismatch between workers’ skills and those demanded by the job  non-participation in the labour market  inefficient use in informal production Waste of resources invested to develop these skills … …and can lead to skill atrophy The crisis has exacerbated under-utilisation of skills... especially for some groups (e.g. youth)

12 12 Skills shortages can also exist  technological shifts  demographically-driven demand (e.g. health care)  long training pipelines Economic output lost if:  employers can’t hire people with the skills they need  employees cannot perform the tasks expected of them.....and incentives to develop missing skills are weak → global competition for talent and to fill shortages

13 13 Low-equilibrium skills outcomes can occur low supply of skills matching low demand for skills  lower incomes  lower productivity  slower growth Most often occurs in:  rural areas  countries where mobility between regions is limited

14 14 Optimising use of skills  Which measures help optimise the utilisation of skills on the job?  How can workforce participation be boosted?  Which tools facilitate the recognition of skills?  How can transparency of skills systems be ensured (role of assessment and qualifications frameworks)?  What information is necessary to facilitate matching of skills (e.g. career guidance)?

15 Strengthening skills systems

16 16 Strengthening skills systems  How to achieve a coordinated whole of government approach?  What is the role of different agents including social partners?  Who should pay for what, when and how?  What are good models of policy evaluation to ensure efficiency/continuity of skills policies?  Which is the right level of intervention (regional and local dimension)?

17 17 Local Skills Strategies (‘ecosystems’)

18 18 Thank you! Ministerial Council Meeting 23-24 May 2012


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