Kenya : Capturing Skills Requirements and Assessing Skills Gaps in the Modern Economy

In Kenya, skills constraints are reported to have a detrimental impact on job creation and labor market outcomes. Employers have reported concerns with the level and relevance of a broad set of socio-emotional skills and cognitive skills amongst jo...

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Main Authors: Sanchez Puerta, Maria Laura, Johansson de Silva, Sarah, Rizvi, Anam
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/295641532463546573/Kenya-capturing-skills-requirements-and-assessing-skills-gaps-in-the-modern-economy
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30169
id okr-10986-30169
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-301692021-06-14T10:08:21Z Kenya : Capturing Skills Requirements and Assessing Skills Gaps in the Modern Economy Sanchez Puerta, Maria Laura Johansson de Silva, Sarah Rizvi, Anam LABOR SKILLS SKILLS DEVELOPMENT TRAINING LABOR MARKET EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT PRODUCTIVITY SECONDARY EDUCATION VOCATIONAL TRAINING TECHNICAL EDUCATION FIRMS SOCIAL PROTECTION JOBS LABOR PRODUCTIVITY SKILLS MEASUREMENT ON-THE-JOB TRAINING In Kenya, skills constraints are reported to have a detrimental impact on job creation and labor market outcomes. Employers have reported concerns with the level and relevance of a broad set of socio-emotional skills and cognitive skills amongst job applicants and recently hired workers. These skill gaps affect firms' competitiveness (ability to grow and create more jobs), as well as productivity (better wages). Evidence of job dissatisfaction on both the demand and supply side suggests that workers are not being matched with the right jobs. Three policy implication are derived from these results. First, worker mobility and resilience to new challenges requires the continuous upgrading of skills through on-the-job and other training opportunities. Second, with the projected population growth rate (for young people) there is an urgent need to foster high productivity jobs, as well as jobs that are inclusive (to vulnerable populations). Third, in order to address the skills mismatch, comprehensive labor market information is needed to guide students and jobseekers by providing unemployment data, job vacancies and the level of wages by occupation type. 2018-08-08T21:00:55Z 2018-08-08T21:00:55Z 2018-05-01 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/295641532463546573/Kenya-capturing-skills-requirements-and-assessing-skills-gaps-in-the-modern-economy http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30169 English Jobs Working Paper;No. 17 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Working Paper Africa Kenya
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic LABOR SKILLS
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
TRAINING
LABOR MARKET
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
PRODUCTIVITY
SECONDARY EDUCATION
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
TECHNICAL EDUCATION
FIRMS
SOCIAL PROTECTION
JOBS
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
SKILLS MEASUREMENT
ON-THE-JOB TRAINING
spellingShingle LABOR SKILLS
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
TRAINING
LABOR MARKET
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
PRODUCTIVITY
SECONDARY EDUCATION
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
TECHNICAL EDUCATION
FIRMS
SOCIAL PROTECTION
JOBS
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
SKILLS MEASUREMENT
ON-THE-JOB TRAINING
Sanchez Puerta, Maria Laura
Johansson de Silva, Sarah
Rizvi, Anam
Kenya : Capturing Skills Requirements and Assessing Skills Gaps in the Modern Economy
geographic_facet Africa
Kenya
relation Jobs Working Paper;No. 17
description In Kenya, skills constraints are reported to have a detrimental impact on job creation and labor market outcomes. Employers have reported concerns with the level and relevance of a broad set of socio-emotional skills and cognitive skills amongst job applicants and recently hired workers. These skill gaps affect firms' competitiveness (ability to grow and create more jobs), as well as productivity (better wages). Evidence of job dissatisfaction on both the demand and supply side suggests that workers are not being matched with the right jobs. Three policy implication are derived from these results. First, worker mobility and resilience to new challenges requires the continuous upgrading of skills through on-the-job and other training opportunities. Second, with the projected population growth rate (for young people) there is an urgent need to foster high productivity jobs, as well as jobs that are inclusive (to vulnerable populations). Third, in order to address the skills mismatch, comprehensive labor market information is needed to guide students and jobseekers by providing unemployment data, job vacancies and the level of wages by occupation type.
format Working Paper
author Sanchez Puerta, Maria Laura
Johansson de Silva, Sarah
Rizvi, Anam
author_facet Sanchez Puerta, Maria Laura
Johansson de Silva, Sarah
Rizvi, Anam
author_sort Sanchez Puerta, Maria Laura
title Kenya : Capturing Skills Requirements and Assessing Skills Gaps in the Modern Economy
title_short Kenya : Capturing Skills Requirements and Assessing Skills Gaps in the Modern Economy
title_full Kenya : Capturing Skills Requirements and Assessing Skills Gaps in the Modern Economy
title_fullStr Kenya : Capturing Skills Requirements and Assessing Skills Gaps in the Modern Economy
title_full_unstemmed Kenya : Capturing Skills Requirements and Assessing Skills Gaps in the Modern Economy
title_sort kenya : capturing skills requirements and assessing skills gaps in the modern economy
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/295641532463546573/Kenya-capturing-skills-requirements-and-assessing-skills-gaps-in-the-modern-economy
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30169
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