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Train, cross train and retrain
By Sarah O’Carroll 19/8/2008
A BREAKDOWN in the
education-to-employment supply chain must be
addressed by managing education and
conducting workforce planning, according to
Matthew Tukaki, director and head of
Government policy organisation SansGov.
In a discussion paper on skills reform,
Tukaki told the Victorian State Government
and the Australian Government that changes
are vital to meet employment demand,
particularly in critical areas such as
information technology, infrastructure,
agriculture and resources.
A
contingent loan scheme to assist those
wanting to return to or participate in
vocational and technical education was one
of the recommendations of the report. Tukaki
also said there was a need for training
provided at both employer and school level
to be validated on how it is going to result
in employment.
“If the Victorian and
Australian Governments are serious about
skills reform … then we need to have a look
at how we can ‘resupply’ our own labour
market, or, alternatively, enter into
serious workforce planning to ensure
consistent job numbers moving forward,” he
said.
International students can no
longer be heavily relied on as a source of
labour, according to the report, because the
number of these students are decreasing at a
significant rate and this, in turn, has an
impact on the number of skilled graduates
who remain in Australia for work once their
studies have been completed.
“The
fact is [that] more and more international
students are deciding to stay home and study
and this in itself is a contributor to the
breakdown in the education-to-employment
supply chain,” he said.
The lure of
emerging markets such as India and China is
also a threat to our future workforce, with
both an exodus of our skilled workers to the
area and less workers from Asia willing to
come to Australia. “Another important
element that cannot be overlooked is the
fact that Australia is right on the edge of
the fastest-growing economic region in the
world,” he said.
“As developing
nations develop, as employment growth
expands and as real wages increase in our
traditional labour supply markets, there is
less of an attraction for workers to want to
migrate to Australia for jobs. This means
that however much we debate the issues of
skilled migration or guest worker programs,
the simple fact is we cannot rely on
consistent labour supply from Asia.”
Global HR services company Drake
International has also called for a closer
alignment between government and industry to
address the essential skills needed in the
future.
“Now is the time to develop
and implement a national plan where we can
jointly tackle the current skills shortage,
as well as planning for workforce supply …”
said David Edwards, strategic manager for
Drake International.
“This is that
opportunity to build a single national body
that can capture, collate and report on
where the demand for skills will emerge,
which industries will be most affected or
what will be the most sought-after job
categories.”
Edwards also said that
the Government must identify which sectors
are expressing demand, how much future
supply can be addressed through the existing
labour pool, education and training system,
and where new initiatives will be needed.
Edwards emphasised the need to work with
employers and employees to identify
opportunities to retrain and transfer skills
from one industry to another.
This
need for cross-training and retraining is
echoed in the SansGov report, with Tukaki
noting that the Australian Government’s
approach to training had not yet been
adopted because agreements between the
States had not been finalised and the cost
to business and industry not been agreed on.
He said that the emphasis should now
be on getting people into training and
validating that the training being provided
is going to result in employment.
“This means increasing activity at the
employer level and school level – train,
cross-train and retrain should be the mantra
moving forward,” he said.
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