不匹配:加拿大工作技能不匹配的原因、程度和成本

Parisa Mahboubi
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引用次数: 8

摘要

大约13%的加拿大工人的技能与他们的工作不匹配。尽管在一项国际调查中,这与经合组织国家10%左右的平均水平有些一致,但加拿大政策制定者有两个理由感到担忧。首先,不同社会经济群体之间存在显著差异。虽然受教育程度较高的工人更有可能技能过剩,但女性、移民和老年工人更有可能技能不足。就移民而言,在加拿大待久了,技能不足的问题就完全消失了,这凸显了为新移民提供严格和方便的技能培训、语言课程和求职研讨会的定居政策的重要性。其次,面对技术发展和人口老龄化,这些结果在未来几年可能会恶化,而与此同时,新移民在加拿大劳动力中的作用正在增强。事实上,各行各业的大多数员工每周至少需要使用一次读写、计算和解决问题等认知技能。更重要的是,没有一种职业完全不需要这些技能。这项研究的结果强调了为所有工人提供更多技能发展和终身学习机会以及更好地满足个人培训需求的重要性,特别是在老年工人和新移民等低技能人群中。除了为低技能工人提供培训机会外,企业还可以通过适当地重新分配任务、提供搬迁援助和寻找利用工人技能的创新方法来减少组织内部的不匹配,以优化生产力。政府可以通过提高劳动力市场灵活性、缓解劳动力流动、更重要的是提高终身学习参与率的政策,帮助减少技能不匹配。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bad Fits: The Causes, Extent and Costs of Job Skills Mismatch in Canada
About 13 percent of Canadian workers have skills mismatched to their jobs. Although this is somewhat in line with an average of around 10 percent among OECD countries in an international survey, Canadian policymakers have two reasons for concern. Firstly, there is significant variation across socioeconomic groups. While workers with higher educational attainment are more likely to be over-skilled, women, immigrants, and older workers are more likely to be under-skilled for their jobs. In the case of immigrants, the under-skilled problem entirely disappears with time spent in Canada, highlighting the importance of settlement policies that provide rigorous and accessible skills training, language programs, and job-search workshops for newcomers. Secondly, these results could worsen in the years ahead in the face of technological development and demographic aging that are occurring in the labour market at the same time as the role of newcomers in Canada’s labour force is growing. As it is, the majority of workers across occupations need to use cognitive skills such as literacy, numeracy, and problem solving at least once a week at work. More importantly, there is no occupation where these skills are not required at all. This study’s results highlight the importance of providing more opportunities for skills development and lifelong learning for all workers and better addressing individual training needs, particularly, among underskilled people such as older workers and new immigrants. Businesses – in addition to providing training opportunities for under-skilled workers – can reduce mismatches within their organizations by appropriately reassigning tasks, providing relocation assistance and finding innovative ways to use workers’ skills in order to optimize productivity. Governments can help reduce skills mismatch with policies that enhance labour market flexibility, ease labour mobility, and more importantly, increase participation in lifelong learning.
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