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Paul Convery

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Title: Paul Convery


1
Learning, skills and crime reduction
  • Paul Convery
  • Director, Centre for Economic Social Inclusion

2
Contradictions for young people
  • Aspiration to maturity at earlier ages
  • adult lifestyle pressure
  • exposure to risky behaviour
  • Achieving economic independence later
  • extended educational participation
  • later entry into labour market

3
Confusions for young people
  • Labour market complexity
  • more demanding employer requirements
  • less tenure and diminished security
  • Weakened family and community support
  • atypical family structures
  • weakened community and informal networks
  • family formation undermined by non-employment

4
16-18s outside employment, training and education
(LFS)
5
NEET characteristics
6
NEET characteristics
  • Classed as ILO unemployed
  • 75 of young men
  • 52, of young women (but a further 25 looking
    after family)
  • Nearly 35,000 (18) have a disability or health
    condition (21 of young men but only 14 of young
    women)

7
Skills polarisation
  • No qualifications down from 25 (1992) to 13
    (1999)
  • 45 of workforce now have NVQ3 (was 33 in 1992)
    but no increase in those qualified to level 3
  • about 30 are significantly over-educated
  • skilled people get even more trained
  • 20 of degree qualified workers regularly receive
    employer funded training
  • compared with only 8 of those qualified to VQ2
    and 3 with no formal qualifications

8
Wage premiums
  • Literacy - achievement at NVQ level 1 - 16
  • Numeracy - achievement at NVQ level 1 - 26
  • GCSEs - 21 over non-qualified
  • A levels - 17 over GCSEs
  • With a degree - 28 over A levels
  • Graduates - 66 over non qualified
  • Level 3 is threshold above which earnings exceed
    national average
  • unskilled earn 30 less than national average
  • Women aged 30-44 - premium of degree holders over
    level 3 is 110 - highest in the OECD

9
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10
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11
Employment rates
12
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13
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14
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15
Attributes of the new affluency
  • Proportion of jobs requiring degrees risen at
    almost 1 percentage point each year
  • Upward trend in requirement for generic skills
    computing, writing, problem-solving and
    professional communication skills
  • Extent and complexity of computer use rising
    "fairly important, very important or essential"
    in two thirds of jobs - increasing by nearly 3
    percentage points a year
  • Internet use "fairly important, very important
    or essential" for more than 1 in 3 workers.

16
Skill gap characteristics
  • Basic computing skills
  • Advanced IT skills
  • Management skills
  • Other technical and practical skills
  • Communication skills
  • Customer handling
  • Team working
  • Problem solving
  • Literacy and numeracy (reported by 25 of
    lower/manual skill workplaces)

17
Main occupations with skill-shortage vacancies
  • craft and skilled trades (22 of the total)
  • associate professional occupations (17)
  • sales occupations (13)
  • personal service occupations (11).
  • Main industries with skill-shortage vacancies
  • craft-intensive construction (12 of the total)
    and manufacturing sectors (16) and
  • two large service industries - finance (17) and
    wholesale/retail (17).

18
What needs to change?
  • Better delivery system
  • Partnership and collaboration
  • Learning from practice
  • Measurement of success

19
Internet
  • www.cesi.org.uk/talks
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