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Skills development for job creation, economic growth and poverty reduction

Type:
Document
Content Type:
Skills development for job creation, economic growth and poverty reduction
Language:

English

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english
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skpEng
Sources:

ILO

The International Labour Organization is the tripartite U.N. agency that promotes Decent Work through employment, social security, labour standards and social dialogue. Its work on skills development is guided by the conceptual framework on Skills to improve productivity, employment growth, and development agreed in 2008 by representatives of Governments, Employers’ Associations and Workers’ Associations. Research, policy advice, and pilot projects and technical cooperation programmes to apply good practices in different circumstances across its 185 member States aims to boost the employability of workers, the productivity and competitiveness of enterprises, and the inclusiveness of economic growth. The ILO Secretariat in offices in 40 countries works with Ministries of Labour, employers’ organizations, and trade unions to integrate skills development into national and sector development strategies in order to better meet current labour market needs and to prepare for the jobs of the future; to expand access to employment-related training so that youth, persons with disabilities and other vulnerable groups are better able to acquire skills and secure productive and decent work; and to improve the ability of public employment services to provide career guidance, maintain labour exchange services, and deliver active labour market programmes.For more information regarding the ILO’s work on skills and employability go to: http://www.ilo.org/skills/lang--en/index.htm; for ILO/Cinterfor's Knowledge Management Plarform, see: http://www.oitcinterfor.org

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skpILO
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ilo
Topics:

Lifelong learning

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There is a critical need for a greater overall investment in education and training, particularly in developing countries. Education and training investments should be closely linked to economic and employment growth strategies and programmes. Responsibility should be shared between the government (primary responsibility), enterprises, the social partners, and the individual. To make lifelong learning for all a reality, countries will need to make major reforms of their vocational and education and training systems. School-to-work schemes for young people should integrate education with workplace learning. Training systems need to become more flexible and responsive to rapidly changing skill requirements. Reforms should also focus on how learning can be facilitated, not just on training for specific occupational categories.

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skpPSLLL
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lifelong-learning
Knowledge Products:

Promotional material

Presentations, discussion papers, meeting reports, promotional materials, videos, fact sheets, brochures and newsletters on skills development for employment.

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skpAIM
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promotional-material
Publication Date:
25 Jan 2016
Doha forum on decent work and poverty reduction 25-26 October 2011 Doha, Qatar: Background paper At the International Labour organization’s (ILO) 2008 International Labour Conference (ILC), representatives of governments, employers and workers adopted a set of conclusions for using skills development to improve productivity, employment growth and development. The conclusions comprise a set of guidelines that can help sustain the competitiveness of enterprises and the employability of workers. In this framework, skills development can help build a “virtuous circle” in which the quality and relevance of education and training for women and men fuels the innovation, investment, technological change, enterprise development, economic diversification and competitiveness that economies need to accelerate the creation of more jobs, but also more productive jobs.

This paper builds on these ILO conclusions. It provides a broad definition of the issue of skills development and its role in promoting economic growth and poverty reduction. It reviews approaches to skills development within the context of international instruments such as the Millimuim Development Goals (MDGs) and reviews trends in the Arab Region. It then proceeds to address the key policy challenges with an international perspective through citing examples of skills development efforts from countries outside the Arab region. The paper concludes with key messages for the future.
Subject Tags:

Poverty

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poverty
Identifier
148

Poverty alleviation

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poverty-alleviation
Identifier
149

Skills and training policy

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skills-and-training-policy
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666
Regions:

Arab States

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