rural areas in the north of england: skills issues professor frank peck (cred director) centre for...
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Rural areas in the North of England:
Skills issues
Professor Frank Peck (CRED Director)Centre for Regional Economic Development
Skills issues for rural areas in the North
•Cumbria Chamber of Commerce with CRED, UoC (2012) Cumbria LEP Business Plan Evidence-base•CRED (2013; 2014) Skills scoping for Cumbria phase 1 and phase 2 reports prepared for Cumbria LEP, Employment and Skills Commission (Funded by ESF Skills for the Workforce 2012-15 Programme)•CRED (2014) Overview of higher level skills needs in Cumbria prepared for Cumbria LEP Employment and Skills Commission•CRED (2015) Evaluation of “the Edge in Cumbria” prepared for Cumbria LEP Employment and Skills Commission•CRED (2014) Employer perception of young people’s employability and “work-ready” skills in Cumbria (funded by for INSPIRA)•Current project joint with Northumbria University – Borderlands 2
Identifying skills issues for Cumbria
Sector-specific skills issues: •Advanced manufacturing, Energy, Food & drink, Tourism•Transport & logistics, Land-based, Creative & cultural
Generic skills issues: •ICT and IT skills•STEM Skills•Leadership & management•Work-readiness particularly of young people•Transversal skills•Basic skills•Customer service skills
Key points on skills for sectors in CumbriaSector Skills issues
Advanced manufacture
Predicted increase in demand for STEM skills, higher level skills, management & leadership.
Energy Significant demand for higher level skills linked to construction, power engineering and business services.
Food & drink High % workers have no qualifications but lack of relevant local training. Shortage of food technologists.
Tourism Customer service skills. Structure of industry makes skill formation a challenge. Application of digital technology.
Transport & logistics
IT skills can be taught; people skills are more of a challenge. Need for change in culture of the industry.
Land-based Improve business planning, marketing skills. Also, how to acquire scientific knowledge in existing and new areas
Creative & cultural
Improve business and management skills, networking skills. Use of social media.
Key points on skills for sectors in CumbriaCompetency Skills issues
IT skills 2011, 17% employers in Cumbria report skills gaps in IT
STEM skills Significant issue in key sectors – manufacturing, energy
Leadership & management
Area of need identified by many sector groups
Work readiness Identified by many SMEs as an issue
Transversal skills Recognition that skills deficits cut across conventional professional and disciplinary boundaries
Basic Skills 2011 survey - 15% report issues with elementary occupations
Customer service 10% report skills gap in “customer service occupations”
Skills issue in Cumbria – what’s “rural” about it? Sectoral issues (typically high location quotients in): •Tourism and environment, Food & drink, Land-based industry, Energy and resources, manufacturing
Structural issues•High proportion of SMBs (small and microbusinesses) in rural areas
Generic issue – impacts of sparcity on rural labour markets•Restricts job seekers access to training and employment choices.•Limits young people’s access to work experience. •Affects employers’ recruitment and skills formation strategies.•Symbiotic relationship between local employers and local communities becoming less sustainable due to:
• a) ageing and decline of WAP and • b) pace of technological change and demand for continuous training• c) Pressure for employers to recruitment from wider fields.
Work ready skills and young people in CumbriaIn-depth interviews with 20 employers across all areas of Cumbria in 2014What skills do they look for in new young recruits? •“Can-do” attitude, initiative, confidence•Communication skills•Flexible, adaptable•Understand company culture•Leadership potential•Good organisation
•Expect recruits to arrive with relevant social skills. •Recognise benefit of substantive work experience (not just short visits). •Employers views of young people? – most felt they lacked awareness of what it means to be work-ready. •Young peoples views of employers? – barriers to accessing work experience (distance, cost, choice) a significant disadvantage.
Labour markets in rural areas beyond Cumbria?
GVA per head across the Borderlands
Trends in GVA per head of Population
Population aged over 65 Borderlands compared to UK 1997 – 2014
Change in Proportion of WAP 1997-2014
The Ten Point Plan – skills in rural areas
Government will: •recognise small schools in sparsely populated areas in their funding formula. •focus efforts to support school improvement in underperforming areas, including rural areas…….•invite local areas to participate in the reshaping, re-commissioning and ongoing commissioning of local post-16 skills provision •increase apprenticeships in rural areas …… in food and farming and by helping small tourism businesses…•In the current bidding round for Enterprise Zones…give preference to proposals involving smaller towns, districts and rural areas. •Ensure that businesses in all Enterprise Zones in rural areas will be able to access high speed broadband.
Rural areas in the North of England:
Skills issues
Professor Frank Peck (CRED Director)Centre for Regional Economic Development