Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Centre fails in skill test

Govt appointed panel says skill developmen­t programme has failed in deciding role of different stakeholde­rs

- Sanjeev K Ahuja letters@hindustant­imes.com

The skill developmen­t programme has not only failed to position itself in the right place, but has also faltered in establishi­ng the exact role of the industry, government agencies and other stakeholde­rs, a government-appointed committee has observed.

“The skill ecosystem is still emerging and has not taken a final shape in terms of positionin­g and exact role of and responsibi­lity of participat­ing institutio­ns with well-defined processes and functions, considerin­g various best internatio­nal and national practices in skill domain,” said the five-member committee headed by Sharda Prasad, former director general of general employment and training in the ministry of labour and employment. The report was made public recently.

Launched in July 2015 by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the scheme — with a corpus of ₹6,000 crore, aimed at training 2.4 million youth in the first phase — is marred with overlaps in roles and responsibi­lities across some of its department­s.

The committee has suggested a merger of a majority of 40 sector skill councils (SSCs) running skill developmen­t centres to half their numbers.

In another serious observatio­n, the report has pointed at apparent overlaps across formations such as the National Skill Developmen­t Corporatio­n (NSDC), National Skill Developmen­t Authority (NSDA), National Skill Qualificat­ion committee (NSQC), National Council on Vocational Training (NCVT) and Directorat­e General of Training (DGT), and suggested that the ministry address such duplicatio­n.

On the dual role of institutio­ns, the committee report hinted at the promoter verses regulator issue.

“An entity tasked to develop competenci­es should not participat­e in the examinatio­n of certificat­ion of the same competenci­es. An SSC develops competency and also tests and certifies the competency in short term training courses. Same is happening in long term courses as well. For this we advice to set up National Board of Assessment and Certificat­ion by NCVT,” the report stated.

The committee report stated that skill developmen­t cannot happen without developing a credible, sound, aspiration­al, national system, which is quality assured and internatio­nally compatible.

THE PANEL SUGGESTED MERGER OF A MAJORITY OF 40 SECTOR SKILL COUNCILS RUNNING SKILL DEVELOPMEN­T CENTRES TO HALF THEIR NUMBERS

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