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Skills and tomorrow’s labour market Becci Newton, Principal Research Fellow Supply and demand
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Today’s labour market Vacancies, skills shortages and gaps, levels of training Employment, unemployment, age trends Future skills demands The fit and role of Apprenticeship Standards Coverage
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2015 (%)2013 (%)2011 (%) Rising vacancies191514 Rising hard to fill vacancies854 Rising skill shortage vacancies643 Density of SSVs largely unchanged since 2013 232216 Reducing skills gaps141517 Staff not fully proficient655 Falling skills under-utilisation3048 Largely static overall rate of training 66 65 Static % of staff being trained636255 Static % off the job training49 47 Today’s labour market: skills and vacancies
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Rising % of population in employment, falling unemployment Reducing % NEET in 16-24 population But youth employment rising as a % of the adult unemployment rate (see chart) Today’s labour market: employment Source: ONS, LM Stats May 2014
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Today’s labour market: employment (2) Source: ONS, LM Stats May 2014 The rise of the older worker (percentage of change in numbers employed 2008-2013
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Employment by sector by age Today’s labour market: employment (3) Source: APS 2015
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Where young people want to work Today’s labour market: employment (4) Source: CISI
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Today’s labour market: apprenticeships (5) Apprenticeship training by sector (All ages, all levels, mostly old-style SASE/Framework Apprenticeship)
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Where will the new jobs be? Replacement and expansion demand Future skill demands: new jobs Source: IER estimates, MDM revision 12015
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Employment in 2022 Future skill demands: new jobs (2) Largest volume Caring and personal services Corporate managers Business and public services associate professionals Admin occupations Elementary trades Fastest growth Caring and personal services Health and social care professionals Health professionals Corporate managers Business, media and public service professionals
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Qualification levels will rise – as much supply-led as demand-led and some evidence of under-employment High growth occupations for young people: customer service (retail and hospitality) caring and personal service jobs technicians (in manufacturing and energy) creative and digital occupations Most will require level 2/3 qualifications Importance of the attitudes and behaviours: enthusiasm, understanding the business context, attention to detail, reliability etc. Coupled to generic (and some technical) competences: communication; problem-solving; production-related technical skills in manufacturing; project management Growing importance of a ‘T’–shaped skill set (combination of depth and breadth) Future skill demands: qualifications, growth occupations, competencies (3)
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New: response to the Richard Review, radical departure from SASE/Frameworks? Employer-led: employers lead and participate in Trailblazer networks to define skills and behaviours required for occupations (the Standard) Employer-led: employers agree high level synoptic assessment (the assessment model) Employer funded? Trailblazer networks on average have taken a year or more to have Standards approved – with limited government funding supplied Employer funded? Employers will co-fund external sources training but at the 10% level (not the 33% tested over the past 2 years) Higher level skills: most Standards are Level 3+; Trailblazers have created new Degree Apprenticeships up to Level 7 The fit and role of the Apprenticeship Standards: about the standards (1)
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145 Standards approved for delivery; 176 Standards in development More standards at higher and Degree levels – promotes use wtihin career transitions (cVET) as well as initial vocational education training (iVET) More than half of employers involved say Standards are an improvement (but for a quarter, it is too early to say) 8% of these employers say they will use the Standards in the next 5 years A quarter of employers in ESS15 aware of Standards 67% of these will use Standards in next 5 years) 6% overall involved in development (in some way) Limited numbers training through standards currently 2,600 Standards started out of 884,000 Apprenticeship started in total: i.e. 0.3% 15 ‘graduates’ this summer (power networks standard) The fit and role of the Apprenticeship Standards: progress and uptake (2)
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Predictions for upwards of 1,500 new Standards to replace 224 SASE/Frameworks: risks overlaps Narrowly defined, not promoting transferable skills – associated with overlapping standards with differently defined training: risks constricting worker mobility Requires expertise to support into delivery – detailed assessment and training plans: risks timetable to start delivery For some Standards, sophisticated and expensive equipment required to meet training requirement may limit the number of providers and geographies involved: risks national roll-out The fit and role of the Apprenticeship Standards: the risks (3)
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