the employment strategy

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The Employment Strategy Geoff Bascand Department of Labour 11 October 2001

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The Employment Strategy. Geoff Bascand Department of Labour 11 October 2001. Establishing the Employment Strategy. A well functioning labour market is critical to social cohesion and economic progress. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Employment Strategy

The Employment Strategy

Geoff Bascand

Department of Labour11 October 2001

Page 2: The Employment Strategy

Establishing the Employment Strategy

• A well functioning labour market is critical to social cohesion and economic progress.

• The Employment Strategy contributes to three key Government goals & links with other strategies such as ‘Reducing Inequalities’.

Page 3: The Employment Strategy

Background & Principles of Background & Principles of the Employment Strategythe Employment Strategy

• Seeks the development of a

broad set of mutually supportive,

co-ordinated policies across a

number of Ministerial portfolios.

Page 4: The Employment Strategy

Background & Principles of the Employment Strategy

• The Employment Strategy provides a broad framework:

for policy makers to understand about

what matters for achieving employment

objectives;

within which the Government’s

employment priorities can be established &

policies can be developed & implemented.

Page 5: The Employment Strategy

Key Government Goals

Principle Objectives of the Strategy

High Level Strategic Goals

Policies and Programmes

Page 6: The Employment Strategy

Key Objectives of the Employment Strategy

• Minimising disadvantage: to minimise the incidence of persistent disadvantage in the labour market

• Maximising potential: to maximise the number of jobs and the level of earnings for all

Page 7: The Employment Strategy

High Level Strategic Goals

• Macroeconomic stability: sustained economic growth and employment growth

• Removing barriers to job growth

• Flexible, highly skilled workforce

• Developing strong communities

• Improving Mäori and Pacific participation

• Improving participation of people with disabilities and other groups at risk

Page 8: The Employment Strategy

Human Capabilities Framework

Achieving the Strategy’s principle objectives is dependent on policies and programmes that are:

• Opportunity creating - maximise employment opportunities through a steady growth in the demand for labour

• Capacity building - encourage the development of skills that are valued in the labour market and

• Matching - facilitate a well-functioning labour market, minimise barriers to the matching skills and jobs, facilitate participation in the labour market and assist adjustment to changes in circumstances

Page 9: The Employment Strategy

Monitoring Regime

The Strategy is monitored at two levels:

• Outcomes - provides a detailed summary of progress in relation to the Employment Strategy goals (every twelve months).

• Activities - provides a detailed summary of government activities and initiatives that have contributed to the achievement of the Employment Strategy goals (every six months).

Page 10: The Employment Strategy

How were Outcome Measures Chosen?

• Outcome measures arose from goals

• Some relationships strong, eg can directly measure economic growth.

• Other outcomes measured by proxy, eg measuring developing strong communities using regional unemployment / employment statistics

Page 11: The Employment Strategy

How were Outcome Measures Chosen?

• Evaluations planned or underway e.g. employment

evaluation strategy; community action research

• Process of measurement is evolving by encouraging

developments in agencies eg Integrated employer-

employee data (with SNZ, Treasury etc), MSD’s Social

Indicators

• Use of robust, well-tested measures that are updated

regularly

Page 12: The Employment Strategy

Strengths of Employment Strategy

• The Strategy deals with issues that cross departments and agencies

• It has both an operational and policy focus• “Top-down” and “bottom -up” approach: sub-

goals developed from underlying objectives. Activities provide focus at an operational level.

• Regular monitoring process• Involvement & development of EMPSOG

Page 13: The Employment Strategy

Employment Senior Officials Group (EMPSOG)

Established in 2000

EMPSOG’s objectives are:

• Reviewing progress towards the accomplishment of the Employment Strategy

• Assessing and identifying any changes in priorities

Page 14: The Employment Strategy

EMPSOG

• Supporting the development of initiatives, through co-ordination with other related initiatives and alignment with strategic objectives

• Representatives from DoL, MSD, MED, Careers Services, TPK, Treasury, Skill NZ, MOE, MoRST, MYA, MWA, MPIA & DPMC

Page 15: The Employment Strategy

Issues

• Relationship of Employment Strategy to other

Government strategies

• Relevance of activities and outcomes to other

departments / agencies

• Continuing level of inter-agency support and involvement

• Ability to improve analysis around the outcomes /

activities relationship