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Achieving Inclusive Growth in the North East

Achieving Inclusive Growth in the North East. 5 th June 2013. Structure of the Presentation. Context The Inclusive Growth Research The North East Economy and the IER Achieving Inclusive Growth Introduction to the Discussion Sessions. Context. Context.

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Achieving Inclusive Growth in the North East

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  1. Achieving Inclusive Growth in the North East 5th June 2013

  2. Structure of the Presentation • Context • The Inclusive Growth Research • The North East Economy and the IER • Achieving Inclusive Growth • Introduction to the Discussion Sessions

  3. Context

  4. Context • Next programme of European Structural Funds • Focussed on 3 pillars – smart growth, sustainable growth and inclusive growth • Inclusive growth – better connectivity between opportunities and people • Represents a significant opportunity for the North East Background Three skills and inclusion priorities • Promoting employment and supporting labour mobility • Promoting social inclusion and combating poverty • Investing in education, skills and lifelong learning

  5. The Inclusive Growth Research

  6. Research Questions Which groups or areas experience lower outcomes or are at risk of becoming disengaged with employment or entrepreneurial opportunities? Which groups experience barriers or are under-represented in key growth areas, such as low carbon, creative and digital, research and innovation and advanced manufacturing opportunities? What has been successful in improving aspirations and outcomes for less engaged groups? Does the currentskills and employability infrastructure address barriers to employment or enterprise opportunities? What opportunities are there for expanding engagement in STEM subjects, innovation and manufacturing skills amongst under-represented groups and communities?

  7. Study Method • Review of labour market position of disadvantaged groups / areas • Analysis of what works in supporting groups / areas • Assessment of existing skills and employability infrastructure Review of Literature • Consultations with third sector organisations, skills agencies, representatives from business community, sector experts and individuals from disadvantaged groups Gap filling

  8. Study Method Testing and refining • Purpose of workshop • Draw on the expertise of those with knowledge of the North East economy and of under-represented groups to answer key questions and make recommendations for the LEP’s approach to inclusive growth

  9. The North East Economy and the Independent Economic Review

  10. Strong employment growth in the last economic cycle: 67,000 jobs added

  11. Changing nature of the North East economy • On-going decline of manufacturing sector and growth of service sector (often low added value) • Growth of highly skilled professional and associate professional and technical occupations • Decline in skilled trades, process, plant and machine operative and admin and secretarial roles • A growing business base and increasing skills levels

  12. But still a significant gap with the national* average in a number of areas * Minus London, Source: Annual Population Survey, Regional Accounts, Annual Business Inquiry

  13. The NE Independent Economic Review • Overview • Provides an independent economic assessment of the economy • Identifies priority actions to stimulate growth and productivity • Focussed on creating more and better jobs • Key finding • A shortage of private sector employment • 60,000 additional private sector jobs required

  14. Where will growth come from? • Low carbon (energy and offshore renewable) • Creative and digital • Advanced manufacturing • Research and innovation • Pharmaceuticals • Tourism • NB - Many of these sectors will require non-specialist roles, e.g. marketing, back office functions etc • Still significant employment opportunities in other sectors – e.g. Care , Retail

  15. Potential Sources of Additional Employment

  16. But more jobs is not enough... • The North East needs higher skilled and higher paid jobs • 60% of its employment growth will be in graduate level jobs • In the long-term this will provide progression opportunities within the labour market • Growth sectors such as the new economy, tourism and business services provide opportunities at various skill levels

  17. And a major focus on young people and education .. • North East Schools Challenge to improve further primary and secondary schools • Doubling of youth apprenticeships to strengthen vocational provision • Increased access to University education for young people

  18. Achieving Inclusive Growth

  19. Which groups experience lower outcomes? • Disadvantage is multi-faceted • The interplay of these characteristics, along with geography and connectivity, impacts on economic opportunities

  20. Labour market context

  21. Implications of low economic participation and employment for the North East economy • Inability to fully maximise its economic opportunities • Smaller pool of labour available to employers • Reduced income in North East • Limited purchasing power • Lower levels of business start up rates • Reduced innovation levels • Overall economic growth below NELEP’s potential

  22. What Works in Achieving Inclusive Growth?

  23. How to improve aspirations and outcomes • Success Factors: • Intensive / Outreach support - successful targeting of disadvantaged groups requires a substantial outreach element and intensive support over the long-term • Support self employment / community enterprise development - promoting enterprise as an option and providing a continuum of quality pre-start, start up and post start support • Involvement of third sector organisations – they understand the barriers and challenges

  24. How to improve aspirations and outcomes • Success Factors: • Provision of employment coaching and work placements – engaging employers to source work and brokering appropriate candidates into employment • Progression to mainstream support – complement and don’t duplicate mainstream support: progress groups to mainstream support once barriers are removed.

  25. Does the skills and employability infrastructure address barriers? • Significant disparities in participation in education, employment support, training and apprenticeships. • Low representation of women in science and engineering – 97% of starts in engineering were male • Less than 20% of starts in science, engineering and manufacturing, energy and utilities, construction and automotive are females • Only 7% of starts nationally were by individuals with a learning disability

  26. Enhancing the skills and employability infrastructure • Addressing gender gaps in participation • Encouraging participation into ‘atypical’ employment • Raising women’s educational participation rates • Developing a strategy for lifelong learning • Building on the strengths of the third sector…

  27. The role of the Third Sector • A vital part of the skills and employability infrastructure: • Provides employment and volunteering opportunities • Improves the skills and experience of disadvantaged groups • Provides a voice and influence • Attracts investment • What can other sectors learn from the third sector in providing opportunities for disadvantaged groups?

  28. The role of the Third Sector • What support does the third sector need to continue playing this role? • Closer working between third sector and private sector (capacity building and joint bidding) • On-doing engagement between NELEP and third sector • More coordinated and proactive approach to joint commissioning of public services contracts by local authorities and other local commissioners • Others?

  29. What are the barriers to participation? • Employment • Lack of technical skills – engagement in STEM subjects from early age • Lack of interest in some vocational areas amongst some groups • Access to low cost transport • Enterprise • Growth focussed enterprise support – may not suit all entrepreneurs • Lack of engagement with mainstream business support

  30. Summary • The 65,000 additional jobs envisaged in the IER could provide significant opportunities for inclusive employment and growth • However there is a need for... • An understanding of the opportunities that will arise and the skills / attributes needed to access them • Clarity over the support needed to ensure all residents can benefit from these opportunities • Agreement on defining and measuring success

  31. Discussion Sessions

  32. Discussion 1: Opportunities in the North East Economy • What employment opportunities are expected to arise in the NE growth sectors? • What employment opportunities will arise in the rest of NE economy? • What opportunities for enterprise are there within the NE economy? • What skills / attributes will be required to access these opportunities? • What are the potential barriers to accessing these opportunities? • Do people within the disadvantaged groups / areas have these skills and attributes and what support do they need to acquire them?

  33. General Barriers to Participation

  34. Specific Barriers to Participation

  35. Employment Opportunities

  36. Enterprise Opportunities

  37. Discussion 2: Delivery of Support to Disadvantaged Groups / Areas • What support is needed? • What are the features of effective support? • How can support best be delivered to disadvantaged groups and areas? • What roles should mainstream and specialist services play? • What are the implications of the IER for institutional capacity and support?

  38. Types of Support Needed

  39. Discussion 3: Success in encouraging Inclusive Growth in the North East • How would you define success? • How would you measuring success in supporting Inclusive Growth? • Is there a need for new indicators and approaches?

  40. Defining Success

  41. Plenary Discussion

  42. Plenary Discussion • What are the implications of the discussions for achieving Inclusive Growth in the North East? • Recommendations for the Growth Plan • Recommendations for the new European Programme • Other issues / priorities

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