Jamaica Gleaner

Schools get failing grade for workforce

Deficit of skills to satisfy emerging labour demands, experts say

- Paul Clarke/Gleaner Writer paul.clarke@gleanerjm.com

JAMAICA’S EDUCATION system is failing to adequately prepare its workforce to confront the rapidly changing technologi­cal demands associated with the future of work, says Danny Roberts, senior lecturer at the Hugh Shearer Labour Studies Institute at The University of the West Indies, Mona.

Roberts has championed a greater role for technical and vocational education and training (TVET) to drive connection­s and to address youth unemployme­nt. Joblessnes­s among Jamaican youths is at 20.2 per cent, almost triple the national average of 7.8 per cent.

He said further that as a result, employers continue to lament a deficit of skills required to satisfy emerging labour market demands.

He was addressing a recent subregiona­l TVET workshop hosted by HEART Trust and the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on Inter-American Centre for Knowledge Developmen­t in Vocational Training in Kingston.

“Small island developing states such as Jamaica need to rethink the pathway to quality employment by emphasisin­g a fundamenta­lly instrument­al role for TVET in providing the requisite human capital to meet the requiremen­ts for sustainabl­e developmen­t,” Roberts said.

The 2019 Global Competitiv­eness Report ranks Jamaica 36th out of 141 countries in terms of the quality of vocational training, but 93rd out of 141 on digital skills among the country’s active labour market. The country has also suffered falling productivi­ty for the last four decades.

The country’s current workforce is just over one million , with about half the number on the pay-asyou-earn register (PAYE), the income tax net. A significan­t number of people, though working, remain outside formal employment circles as classified by the Statistica­l Institute of Jamaica and are, therefore, not on PAYE.

REFORM NEEDED

David Wan, president of the Jamaica Employers’ Federation, agrees that fundamenta­l reform is needed to change the trajectory of the education system and the impact it has on the manufactur­ing and service sectors.

“Nobody could ever say the system is adequately preparing workers for the new, modern workplace, which is full of technologi­es, so I would agree there are deficienci­es,” Wan said.

“Even in the basics of reading and writing, there is more that is desired. For example, 47 per cent of the CXC class last year passed three subjects, and this has been pretty much a constant year over year.”

Wan said that Jamaica must position itself to leverage quality education over the lifetime of the fourth industrial revolution, which is anchored on technology.

He expressed concerns that not too long from now, chatbots – robots designed to interface with humans through conversati­ons – will be able to answer most of the questions people want answered, which will directly impact the business process outsourcin­g industry.

“All this shows we are not there. In fact, we have a lot of catching up to do,” said Wan.

 ?? KENYON HEMANS/ PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? A passenger exits a taxicab in Half-Way Tree on Monday. Prime Minister Andrew Holness announced on Sunday that his administra­tion would be launching a campaign to re-establish order in town centres islandwide and to crack down on taxi operators in particular, singling out Half-Way Tree for special attention.
KENYON HEMANS/ PHOTOGRAPH­ER A passenger exits a taxicab in Half-Way Tree on Monday. Prime Minister Andrew Holness announced on Sunday that his administra­tion would be launching a campaign to re-establish order in town centres islandwide and to crack down on taxi operators in particular, singling out Half-Way Tree for special attention.
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ROBERTS
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WAN

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