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Skills for innovation: a quick overview Stéphan Vincent-Lancrin OECD Centre for Educational Research and Innovation (CERI)

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Presentation on theme: "Skills for innovation: a quick overview Stéphan Vincent-Lancrin OECD Centre for Educational Research and Innovation (CERI)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Skills for innovation: a quick overview Stéphan Vincent-Lancrin OECD Centre for Educational Research and Innovation (CERI)

2 Past work covered in horizontal documents Contribution of higher education to quality human resources, research and innovation –Broadened access, graduation, quality –Funding of tertiary education (teaching and research) –Balance between modes of funding (competitive vs. block grants) –Links with industry –Reflection on the academic profession Importance of knowledge flows –Mobility of staff (research careers, public-private, non-compete clauses) –Migration (highly skilled and low skilled, short and long) –Cross-border higher education (teaching and research) –Management of diasporas –Facilitation of communities of practice

3 THE DIVERSITY OF QUALIFICATIONS AND SKILLS What kinds of qualifications are used by innovative companies?

4 Skills for innovation (see Philip Toner’s paper) Lack of skills hinders innovation Skills for innovation are diverse because of diversity of innovation at the sectoral level: –Science and engineering… but not only –General tertiary education… but also VET Because of innovation, we don’t know what the skill demand will be in the future: need for lifelong learning and transferable skills

5 SKILL-BIASED TECHNICAL CHANGE How has innovation changed the demand for skills?

6 How the demand for skills has changed Economy-wide measures of routine and non-routine task input (US) Source: Levy and Murnane Mean task input as percentiles of the 1960 task distribution

7 Canada: increase in creativity- oriented jobs (1901-2006)

8 Employment structure in Europe in 1993 (hours worked) Source: Goos, Manning and Salomons (based on EWCS data)

9 Employment structure in Europe in 2006 (hours worked) Source: Goos, Manning and Salomons (based on EWCS data)

10 Change in employment structure in Europe: 1993-2006 (% points) Source: Goos, Manning and Salomons (based on EWCS data)

11 Intermediate conclusions Need for more tertiary graduates (general, vocational, training)… until there are signs of « over-education » (declining returns) Problem of drop-outs before high school: –Little chances to get a low-skill job –Little chances to have access to adult education and training

12 LEARNING ORGANISATIONS How do and should companies use the skills at their disposal to foster innovation?


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