Skills and employability in the Arab States
The Arab States currently face a major unemployment crisis, mainly due to a lack of job creation rather than the competencies of workers. However, the region also suffers from a serious mismatch between the competencies that are in demand, and those supplied through the education and skills development systems. This skills mismatch is due primarily to:
- Significant over-qualification of tertiary educated students compared to jobs that are often at skilled and technical levels;
- inefficient governance of many national skills-development systems that fail to involve employers and workers in a meaningful manner, and hence their programmes lack market relevance;
- programmes that are based neither on skills anticipation nor on evidence of success of past interventions;
- qualifications that are often not competency-based, as well as certificates which are not trusted by employers or used for recruitment; and
- capacity of employers to identify the competencies required for business growth and transmit the right signals to the market the skills they require.
At the same time, national systems are poorly equipped for lifelong learning required to respond to the challenges that the Future of Work presents. Nonetheless, there have been important positive developments towards reform of Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) in the region, in particular relating to (a) skills and employment committees for local economic development in the occupied Palestinian territory (OPT), (b) the adoption of a TVET strategy in Lebanon, (c) the adoption of new TVET law in Jordan that provides space for employers to steer the process at national and at sector levels.
ILO Response in Arab States
The ILO’s skills and employability interventions are based on Human Resources Development Recommendation, 2004 (No. 195), the conclusions on skills for improved productivity, employment growth and development of the International Labour Conference (2008), as well as the ILO’s Call for Action on Youth Employment (2012), and the 2019 ILO Centenary Declaration on the Future of Work.
The ILO’s activities to enhance market relevant skills and improve employability include:
- Improving strategic frameworks and governance of skills development systems;
- anticipating skills needs – through studies and surveys;
- design and implementation of competency-based training within sector-based approaches and non-formal training in a context of fragility;
- apprenticeship and work-based leaning schemes, and national frameworks on apprenticeship;
- public employment services;
- monitoring and evaluation of skills development programmes;
- skills development for Persons with Disabilities;
- improvement of testing and certification systems and recognition of prior learning; and
- life-long learning in the context of the Future of Work.
Focus on
Enabling success: Supporting Youth in MENA in their Transition from Learning to Decent Work
Quality assurance and accreditation in technical and vocational education and training in Lebanon
Projects
Promoting Productive Employment and Decent Work for Women in Egypt, Jordan and the occupied Palestinian territory
The project aims to promote productive employment and decent work for women in Egypt, Jordan, and the occupied Palestinian territory through reducing the barriers to women’s entry to and retention in decent work.
Enhanced Rural Resilience in Yemen - Phase 2 (ERRY II)
ERRY II is the second phase of the recently completed Enhanced Rural Resilience in Yemen (ERRY) programme, funded by the European Union, and implemented by the UNDP, ILO, WFP, and the FAO. The overall objective of the programme is to contribute to reduced vulnerability and strengthened resilience of crisis-affected communities in Yemen through the creation of sustainable livelihoods and improving access to basic services.
Applying the G20 Training Strategy in Jordan (Phase 2)
The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan has begun implementation of the second phase of the "Applying the G20 Training strategy: A partnership of the ILO and the Russian Federation" project, which is aims to strengthen national skills development systems, policies and strategies so that to improve employability of both women and men, promote equal access to employment opportunities as well as equal treatment including increased incomes, for inclusive and sustainable growth.
Multimedia
Building skills and promoting employment for Jordan’s female plumbers
Stemming the brain drain: Improving skills for migrants and refugees
For more information
Senior Skills and Employability Specialist
& Coordinator for Amman Decent Work Country Programme
(e):daru@ilo.org