Mertens, L.
Labour competence: emergence, analytical frameworks
and institutional models
Montevideo: Cinterfor, 1999
119 p. (Tools for change, 3)
ISBN 92-9088-094-4
US$ 10.00
317 Kb Complete document in pdf format
(Also
available in Spanish)
The concept of labour competence emerged in the 1980s
in certain industrialized countries, particularly in those which were
finding it difficult to link the training system to the needs of manufacturing
industry. The problems experienced in these countries were not only
quantitative; in fact they were mainly qualitative. The traditional
systems of education and training did not correspond to the times. The
response was the notion of labour competence, which takes an integral
view of training, designing programmes to connect the world of work
and society in general with the world of education and training.
The same problems also arise in developing countries, where they are
probably more serious and persistent, and where fewer resources are
available for education. In these countries a system of labour competence
would appear to be an attractive way of moving training and education
in a direction that will achieve a better balance between the needs
of individuals, firms and society in general.
Before presenting it as a possible solution to the problems and challenges
that developing countries, particularly in Latin America, face in terms
of training, it is worth asking how labour competence is linked to world
trends in competitivity, productivity and innovation, as well as to
workers' expectations at enterprise level. Other fundamental questions
are: what methodological and institutional models of competence are
already being applied and what are their respective advantages and disadvantages?
Without pretending to an exhaustive analysis of the subject nor the
presentation of definite conclusions, the aim of the present study is
to contribute to the debate by commenting on the characteristics of
labour competence and evaluating its effect on the labour market.
The first chapter examines the internal labour market of the firm,
and the second considers whether labour competence could be an answer
to challenges in the external labour market.
Labour competence is not a unique model, but covers a variety of interpretations
and approximations, with their implications for the social partners
in production. Chapter 3 analyses the different methodological trends
with respect to labour competence and their advantages and disadvantages.
The final chapter discusses institutional models which are currently
practised in various countries, commenting on their advantages and disadvantages.
In the conclusion, the critical factors identified throughout the study
are recapitulated.
Many of the proposals set forth have their origin in meetings organized
by the Mexican Council for Standardization and Certification of Labour
Competence (CONOCER), as well as in discussions with personnel in the
Department of Training and Productivity of the Mexican Labour and Social
Security Ministry, especially in the Integral Quality and Modernization
Programme (CIMO). Most of the important bibliographical references and
quotations come from these institutions, from the Training Policies
and Systems Branch of the ILO and from Cinterfor. Cinterfor also contributed
some of the content and provided editorial assistance.
This document was prepared at the request of the Training Policies
and Systems Branch (POLFORM) of the ILO and of Cinterfor/ILO.
Comments received from Pedro Daniel Weinberg, Agustin Ibarra, Anselmo
Garcia, Andres Hernandez and Roberto Wilde are greatly appreciated.
CONTENTS
Introduction
I. The
changing modalities of production and the emergence of labour competence
at enterprise level
1. Dynamics of competitivity and labour competence
2. Strategies for improving productivity and labour competence
2.1 Technological innovations
2.2 New organizational forms
2.3 Innovation and heterogeneity of the production structure
2.4 Work organization and union vision
3. Human resource management and labour competence
II. Transformations
in the labour market and labour competence
1. Transformations in demand
1.1 The skilled worker
1.2 In the face of informality and unemployment: Entrepreneurship and
solidarity as a basic skill?
2. Evolution of training programmes towards a labour competence focus
2.1 Closing the gap between formal education and vocational training
systems
2.2 Training and labour relations
2.3 Training as a part of the process of technological transfer
2.4 Training as an educational phenomenon, linked to productive processes
2.5 Training for competencies
2.6 New institutional arrangements
2.7 Subjects and modes of action
2.8 New directions in the case of Mexico: Towards active labour market
policies
2.9 Standardization and certification of labour competence: Proposal
to integrate active labour market policies
3. Social partners and labour competence
3.1 Management perspective
3.2 Union point of view
III. Labour
competence system: Analytical models
1. From qualification to competence
2. Occupational certification
3. Behaviourist analysis as a basis for labour competence
4. Functional analysis as a basis for labour competence
5. Constructive analysis as a basis for labour competence
6. Standards and the assessment of labour competence
7. Training for labour competence
8. Standards as a regulating instrument in the labour market
9. Certification of competence standards
IV. Institutional
models and the role of the social partners
1. Model driven by the government
2. Model regulated by the market
3. Model driven by employers' and workers' organizations
V. Conclusions
Bibliography
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