Adecco chief calls for life-long learning to dodge jobs
'time bomb'
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[November 15, 2018]
By John Revill
ZURICH (Reuters) - Companies should set up
portable accounts to pay for life-long learning to help workers upgrade
their skills and remain employable as robots take over more jobs, Adecco
Group <ADEN.S> Chief Executive Alain Dehaze said.
As increasing automation eliminates many roles, government and the
private sector should work together to fill skills gaps, while workers
must become more flexible, the head of the world's largest staffing
services company told Reuters in an interview.
"If they don't quickly reform their education system, countries will
create a time bomb," said Dehaze. "They won't have the correct talent
any more and companies will move away."
The 55-year-old Belgian who has led Switzerland-based Adecco Group since
2015 said its customers - employers who take on temporary and permanent
staff - want more flexible and more skilled workers.
"Digital skill shortages are one of the biggest problems for many of our
clients. In Europe alone there will be 900,000 unfilled vacancies by
2020 due to a lack of digital skills," Dehaze said, citing a European
Commission study.
Companies and workers must improve training to fill these gaps, he said,
especially as every four years people effectively lose 30 percent of
their technical skills because the environment is changing so rapidly.
Employers could either lay off existing workers and recruit new staff -
an expensive exercise - or retrain them. Cutting a job can cost roughly
$100,000 in Switzerland, three times more than retraining, he said.
"Our current system comes from the time of the industrial revolution and
is based on permanent work contracts," Dehaze said at the company's
Zurich headquarters.
"But the era of life-long jobs will soon be over. Society needs a new
social contract."
OFFICE CLERKS, FOOD WORKERS BEWARE
Up to 375 million employees globally may need to change their work
category by 2030, according to a study by consultancy McKinsey & Co.
Areas like office administration and food preparation will be among the
hardest hit by the rise in automation, as robots and artificial
intelligence programs take over repetitive tasks.
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CEO Alain Dehaze of Swiss Adecco Group is seen during an interview
with Reuters in Zurich, Switzerland October 30, 2018. Picture taken
October 30, 2018. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
Against this backdrop, Adecco Group - which competes with Randstad <RAND.AS> and
ManpowerGroup <MAN.N> - has invested in training, buying General Assembly for
$412.5 million this year.
To simplify career-long training, portable accounts, dubbed "life-long learning
accounts", could be created, Dehaze said.
Employees and companies would pay into the accounts and when they change jobs,
employees could take the accumulated capital with them. If they need further
training they could activate the account to pay for it.
Dehaze has discussed the idea with government officials in France, Italy and
Singapore, an Adecco spokeswoman said. Employees could be given tax incentives
to pay into the scheme, the spokeswoman said.
Individual training will be particularly important as freelance workers make up
an increasing portion of the workforce in the so-called gig economy, as shown by
ride-hailing company Uber.
Manual workers like plumbers and electricians will still be needed, and those
with broader training have the best chances, he said, adding fears about jobs
completely disappearing are too pessimistic.
He cited the United States, where the proportion of people working in
agriculture has fallen to around 2 percent from 40 percent in 1902 even while
U.S. unemployment hits its lowest level since the late 1960s.
"The main concern is not that we will have no or too little work, it is about
quickly finding or developing the right skills when old job profiles disappear,"
Dehaze said.
(Editing by Adrian Croft)
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