Competency Management, Coordination and Responsibility in Slovenia

The purpose of this article is to highlight the importance of investments into competencies. The identification of competencies should belong to the strategic goals of any socially responsible society. The right competencies are a crucial precondition for a functioning labour market in times of digi...

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Main Author: Zupančič Magda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-09-01
Series:Naše Gospodarstvo
Subjects:
i26
j24
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/ngoe-2020-0016
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spelling doaj-a501d2b1a2934fc6ae1631bd29d4da492021-09-06T19:22:38ZengSciendoNaše Gospodarstvo2385-80522020-09-01663364710.2478/ngoe-2020-0016ngoe-2020-0016Competency Management, Coordination and Responsibility in SloveniaZupančič Magda0IRDO Institute, Ministry of Labour, Family, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities, SloveniaThe purpose of this article is to highlight the importance of investments into competencies. The identification of competencies should belong to the strategic goals of any socially responsible society. The right competencies are a crucial precondition for a functioning labour market in times of digitalisation and technological changes: for good economic performance as well as to ensure lifelong productive and inclusive individuals. Relevant skills and competencies should respond to labour market needs as well as to economic requirements. The approach to this study is linked to the practical deficiencies of ineffective competency management in Slovenia and its consequences. The methodology combines study of theoretical models and specific skill framework in selected countries with chosen policies. The findings confirm that educational paths in Slovenia are not aligned with the economy requirements. Competencies do not correspond to actual industrial policy priorities. The article identifies the reality of competency policy in Slovenia and governance gaps in comparison with EU and OECD countries. It focuses on foreseen skills challenges and skills forecasting needs. The article offers solutions and policies for better skills matching and further reflections on more co-ordination and governance between educational policies and competency requirements in the economy. One limitation of this study is the variety of policies in countries, hindering the transferability. Nevertheless, the article tackles skill and competency challenges, which are common in most of the countries and require actions.https://doi.org/10.2478/ngoe-2020-0016competenciesskill mismatchesskill gapindustrial policyforecastingi26j24
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zupančič Magda
spellingShingle Zupančič Magda
Competency Management, Coordination and Responsibility in Slovenia
Naše Gospodarstvo
competencies
skill mismatches
skill gap
industrial policy
forecasting
i26
j24
author_facet Zupančič Magda
author_sort Zupančič Magda
title Competency Management, Coordination and Responsibility in Slovenia
title_short Competency Management, Coordination and Responsibility in Slovenia
title_full Competency Management, Coordination and Responsibility in Slovenia
title_fullStr Competency Management, Coordination and Responsibility in Slovenia
title_full_unstemmed Competency Management, Coordination and Responsibility in Slovenia
title_sort competency management, coordination and responsibility in slovenia
publisher Sciendo
series Naše Gospodarstvo
issn 2385-8052
publishDate 2020-09-01
description The purpose of this article is to highlight the importance of investments into competencies. The identification of competencies should belong to the strategic goals of any socially responsible society. The right competencies are a crucial precondition for a functioning labour market in times of digitalisation and technological changes: for good economic performance as well as to ensure lifelong productive and inclusive individuals. Relevant skills and competencies should respond to labour market needs as well as to economic requirements. The approach to this study is linked to the practical deficiencies of ineffective competency management in Slovenia and its consequences. The methodology combines study of theoretical models and specific skill framework in selected countries with chosen policies. The findings confirm that educational paths in Slovenia are not aligned with the economy requirements. Competencies do not correspond to actual industrial policy priorities. The article identifies the reality of competency policy in Slovenia and governance gaps in comparison with EU and OECD countries. It focuses on foreseen skills challenges and skills forecasting needs. The article offers solutions and policies for better skills matching and further reflections on more co-ordination and governance between educational policies and competency requirements in the economy. One limitation of this study is the variety of policies in countries, hindering the transferability. Nevertheless, the article tackles skill and competency challenges, which are common in most of the countries and require actions.
topic competencies
skill mismatches
skill gap
industrial policy
forecasting
i26
j24
url https://doi.org/10.2478/ngoe-2020-0016
work_keys_str_mv AT zupancicmagda competencymanagementcoordinationandresponsibilityinslovenia
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