European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D31 Monitoring Recruitment Difficulties.

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Presentation transcript:

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D31 Monitoring Recruitment Difficulties The European Commission perspective Germana Di Domenico European Commission DG Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities CEDEFOP Skillsnet Agora Conference Workshop on “Skill need in enterprises” Thessaloniki, 21 st February 2008

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D32 Long-term challenges/1 Globalisation  Jobs moving to countries with lower labour costs  Increased competition = need for labour up-skilling  Demographic changes and ageing population

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D33 Long-term challenges/2 Labour Market  Demographic changes = labour market mismatches (skill gaps and labour shortage)  Labour mobility and immigration  Structural unemployment + increasing long- term unemployment = poverty, social exclusion, pressures on benefit systems

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D34 Country Patterns Pattern 1 - Countries where: –labour demand is/has been relatively low –unemployment benefit receipt is more widespread than other income support benefits. –levels of registered (long-term) unemployment are typically high in these countries E.g.: France, Finland, Germany, Italy Pattern 2 - Countries where: –labour demand is/has been relatively high –Inactivity related benefit receipt (disability, sickness, unconditional social assistance, early retirement) is more widespread –levels of registered unemployment are therefore lower E.g.: Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Netherlands, United Kingdom

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D35 Labour market mismatches  (high) levels of unemployment can exist side-by side with (high) demand for labour  jobseeker’s employment readiness, occupation choice, skills/competencies or earning requirements do not match employers’ demands Others (UK) - Internal skills gap: arising from lack of proficiency of existing staff

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D36 Job vacancy Post (newly created, unoccupied or about to become vacant) for which the employer is taking active steps to find a suitable candidate from outside the enterprise concerned and which the employer intends to fill either immediately or in the near future Source: Eurostat Reference Metadata, Summary methodology, job vacancy statistics

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D37 Job vacancies rate, Source: Eurostat,

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D38 The Eurostat Vacancy Survey Executed quarterly, it creates statistics on vacancy stocks with a breakdown on sectors (NACE - Statistical Classification of Economic Activities ) Once a year, a breakdown by occupation is provided following the ISCO-88 (International Standard Classification of Occupations, 1988 version) at one-digit level It also provides a breakdown by region (NUTS - Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics) for some countries in the annual data collection

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D39 Strenghts The Eurostat vacancy survey has a methodology that is agreed upon. Though there are several exceptions what to include in the survey in the different countries, these are well known and can be identified in the metadata The vacancy survey data is available in the internet, calculations can be made online Breakdown to business sectors (11 NACE classes ).

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D310 Weaknesses It is a survey (with “not obligatory” mandate on Member States, so far) and data are not always (as rapidly) available (as needed). Time series should be provided since 2001 when the Eurostat survey programme started. However, up to now, the vacancy survey does not cover all Member states and for Countries that do participate quite some gaps in the time series exist Information on occupation is provided only on an annual basis and at one-digit-level, i.e. details on occupations are missing. For calculations/estimations of vacancy turnover (and vacancy duration) both stock and flow data would be needed, but in the survey only stock data is provided.

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D311 Which role for the Public Employment Services in processing job vacancies? Deliver (free of charge) a wide range of services to labour demand (enterprises and employers in general) and supply (unemployed, inactive and job changers) Contribute to address “information asymmetries” and improve transparency in the labour market Identify occupational segments suffering from recruitment difficulties

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D312 European PES Vacancy Monitoring (EPVM) The EPVM is the first EUROPEAN MONITORING TOOL FOR PES VACANCIES It is a dataset of stocks and flows of PES vacancies on a quarterly basis, broken down to ISCO 3-digit level (breakdowns to occupations and, still to a lesser extent, sectors) PES are responsible for collecting and recoding their vacancy data in the agreed format Complete time series starting in 2003 are at present available for 17 countries (19 PES in total) The Expert Working Group mission is to: Improve the comparative transnational monitoring of developments in labour demand Contribute to the identification and diagnosis of market segments suffering form recruitment difficulties

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D313 Strengths 1.The EPVM includes both stock and inflow of vacancies + breakdowns to ISCO 3-digit level 2.PES vacancies are administrative data, thus available regularly and almost immediately 3.Minor costs compared to a regular survey 4.Possibility to calculate time series backwards to start from the beginning 5.Measure and explanation of PES market penetration (coverage) 6.Tracing and diagnosing changes in the size of market demand

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D314 PES vacancy intake (Source: EPVM, Q3-2007)

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D315 Weaknesses -PES vacancies are only part of the market -Data on economic activities (NACE) are not (yet) part of the EPVM -Double counting may be a problem in some PES -Heterogeneity of data (e.g. captured vacancies may or not include the temporary work agencies ones) -A precise and effective tool for identification of recruitment difficulties cannot be derived from simply observing developments in stocks and flows of notified vacancies

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D316 Example PES A has a high market share in the low and medium qualified vacancies, but only a small market share in the higher qualifications If vacancies in Country A rise for the higher qualifications, will this be visible in the EPVM? It can be assumed that by occupation there will be an increase of the higher qualified vacancies, BUT in the total important developments are likely to remain not sufficiently visible.

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D317 EURES and the Job Mobility Portal Set up in 1993, EURES is a co-operation network between the European Commission and the EU countries (plus Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein) and other partner organisations The purpose of EURES is to provide information, advice and recruitment/placement (job-matching) services for the benefit of workers and employers The portal ( contains at present about 1.3 million vacancies daily and more than CVs. Most of the vacancies are made available by the national PES providing (the majority of) their notified vacancies and sometimes also the vacancies collected via the PES vacancy portals. The internet site has about one million visitors a month.

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D318 Strengths 1.Member States are supposed to make all their PES vacancies available in EURES. 2.EURES has the same structure for all countries, so that statistics would be based on this (same) structure. 3.EURES has a breakdown of ISCO and often also of NACE. They can moreover also be broken down to NUTS regions. 4.There are several items saved with additional information for each vacancy, e.g. creation and closing date should make it possible to calculate inflow and duration

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D319 Weaknesses 1.Statistics that can presently be derived from the EURES internet portal only entail some basic information like total daily stocks and a breakdown by country and region. These data are available only for the actual day, not yet for the previous day let alone as time series. 2.The quality of vacancies in the EURES internet portal varies from country to country, especially concerning the classification of vacancies to the harmonised ISCO system. 3.A lack of comparability also applies to quantity: Not yet all member states provide all their notified vacancies, and the exceptions are not the same for each country 4.Possible duplication of vacancies also seems to be a problem in some countries.

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D320 Challenges and learning points for PES (1) The big challenge remains to create an observation instrument that is also capable of tracing changes in smaller segments of the labour market in order to have focused actions LABOUR SHORTAGE: general tendency towards better tailored, targeted and individualised services Towards: Job-seekers –strong start: segmentation, profiling and targeting Employers –anticipation of changes –re-inventing cooperation in recruitment and managing change situations

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D321 Challenges and learning points for PES (2) SKILL GAP: new PES models beyond the matching and activation function Involve: Innovative ways of –responding to new challenges of recruitment –promoting age management and generation change –fostering work ability in organisations –supporting individually tailored life long learning Modernised organisational structure of PES, e.g. setting up of “One-Stop Shops” to deliver combined interventions and complementary active labour market programs (matching/vocational training); stronger cooperation with local partners and other stakeholders

European Commission 21-feb-08Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit D322 Follow-up and Further Initiatives  EPVM: Stronger focus on recruitment difficulties, country- specific analysis and exchange of good practices to deal with these difficulties; link to the wider issue of “PES services to Employers”  EURES web services quality project (working group with 13 Countries involved): to standardise procedures in managing vacancies and CVs across Europe  “New Skills for New Jobs” (December 2007): to ensure a better matching between labour market needs and human capital policies, by: -Identifying new jobs and skill needs -Validating competencies, increasing transparency and identifying training needs -Equipping people for new jobs