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Creating jobs and building economies through strategic employment policies. Foluso Phillips Phillips Consulting. My Agenda. Some Current Realities. Objectives of national employment policies. Who should formulate polices on employment?. Performance indicators on employment issues.
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Creating jobs and building economies through strategic employment policies Foluso Phillips Phillips Consulting
My Agenda Some Current Realities Objectives of national employment policies Who should formulate polices on employment? Performance indicators on employment issues Formulating an employment policy Concept of National Competencies
Some Current Realities • Public sector is largest employer & will continue to be so: • Africa’s Social security • Largest budget and spender. • Private sector is challenged in Africa • New employment will come from entrepreneurship, SMEs, cooperatives etc • Brain drain is real and valuable • Self employment is a strong strategy for economic emancipation.
Some Current Realities • Higher enterprise creation will increase level of employment • The cost and process for enterprise creation is still tedious • There are no large corporates for SMEs to support • FDI will only happen through macro economic stability.
Employment Policies Labour Market Economic Environment Promoting trade and investment for productive employment Promoting technology for higher productivity and job creation Promoting sustainable development for equitable livelihood Macro-economic policy integration Employment through entrepreneurship Improving knowledge and skills Active labour market policies Job protection through wider skills & self employment Reconciling supply & demand
Objectives of National Employment Policies • An understanding of employment demographics • Knowledge of the labour supply & demand equation nationally & by sector • An understanding of the elements which influence the economic environment & gainful employment: • Level of trade, economic activity & investment • Level and type of imports • Market access of local output • Policy integration – growth & employment.
Objectives of National Employment Policies • Influence education & training: • Skills available & required and lead time for ‘production’ • Increase local labour content. • Anticipatory capabilities: • Predict demand for specific labour skills • Encourage DFI through availability of value for money labour
Objectives of National Employment Policies • Sustainable development: • Fundamental rights at work • Work place health & safety • HIV/AIDS • Remuneration and reward structures: • Private & Public sectors • Ensuring equity and competitiveness • Value for money labour provision.
Who Should Formulate Employment Policies? • Government ministries: • Labour & productivity • Commerce & Industry • State governments • The Labour unions: • International, national & sector • Educational & technical institutions & the youths • Employers of labour: • Public & private. • Employment agencies & consultants
Possible Performance Indicators? • Unemployment data – sector & region • Employed data – sector & region • Vacancies not filled due to absence of skills • Foreign labour (skills or policy gap) • Professional, technical and other graduates in the pipeline (labour production capacity) • Types of ‘graduates’ who fail to get jobs • Training & development capacity • Social unrest and crime.
What Supports Policy Formulation? • Clear understanding national economic and social goals • Monitoring & benchmarking global trends in commerce, industry & trade • Extensive data collection and interpretation • Constant communication and interaction with the various stakeholders • Manpower forecasts – national, regional and Sectoral • Education – what should we be teaching our children today for tomorrow • Legislative process to enact policies critical to overall economic development.
The Concept of National Competencies • Competencies relate to the knowledge, skills and attitude required to successfully carry out a particular role or service • Competencies exist at a national, corporate and individual level • National competencies usually revolve around a country’s natural resources • Corporate and individual competencies enhance and support the national competency • National Competencies help to secure comparative advantage
National Competencies • Norway: • Fishing, shipbuilding, oil rig platforms, fishing equipment etc • Canada: – Mining, mining equipment, technology and management • USA: • Technology – applied to everything • Japan: • No resources – efficiency, discipline and quality • S. Africa: • Mining, Tourism, hospitality, sports, entertainment • India: • Emerging intellectual competencies in IT
Nigeria’s competencies – case study Agriculture? • Peanuts, cocoa, rubber, cotton, palm oil, hides & skins • 85% of population • Agricultural research institutes • Agriculture taught in schools • Tough to get into ‘varsity to study Agric • Mastered transportation logistics to ports • Financing through regional banks • Regional competencies • Industries began to emerge (Unilever, Cadbury, UAC etc).
What happened? – Oil Happened • Oil created opportunity for another competency but… • Low ‘people’ input – high financial output • No strategic focus on developing oil related competencies: • Very little ripple effect, little national engagement • No evolving national technical & organisational competency in oil production • Successive governments failed to invest oil proceeds: • Expand agriculture (the competency) • Horizontal or vertical integration (factories & services) • The Infrastructure to support its growth • Reducing opportunity for private sector engagement.
National Competencies in Africa • Ghana – agriculture? Cocoa • Uganda – agriculture? Coffee • DRC – potential competency in hydro • Franco – phone countries – strong attachment to France • Gambia – tourism • Botswana – mining • Lesotho – hydro, agriculture • Etc.
Integrative Policies • Beneficiation strategy • Gold & diamonds to jewellery • Cocoa to chocolates • Crude Oil to petroleum products • Rubber to tyres • Focussed integration strategy • Building industries and not companies • Full participation in the production value chain • SME’s must ‘feed’ industry • Where are the industries?
Employment Policies Labour Market Economic Environment
“The principle economic goal of any nation is to produce a high and rising standard of living for its citizens by gainfully employing them” … Michael Porter
Developing the skills, knowledge & capabilities of your people in areas of clear national comparative advantage should be the focus of employment polices and strategies in Africa
Thank You! Foluso Phillips