Lifelong Learning for an AI-Driven Labour Market

Syllabus: GS3/ Economy

Context

  • The International Labour Organization (ILO) in its report has called on governments to make lifelong learning a central pillar of economic and social policy amid rapid technological and structural changes in labour markets.

What is Lifelong Learning?

  • Lifelong learning refers to the continuous acquisition of knowledge, skills, and competencies throughout an individual’s life. It includes:
    • Formal education and vocational training.
    • Informal learning through work experience and digital platforms.
    • Continuous reskilling and upskilling to adapt to changing labour markets.

Key Findings of the ILO Report

  • Inequalities in Learning Opportunities: Informal workers, low-income groups, women, and less-educated individuals have significantly lower access to training opportunities.
    • The report highlights a widening “learning divide” between formal and informal sectors.
  • Overemphasis on Formal Education: Existing policies focus excessively on initial formal education while neglecting continuous skill development throughout life.
  • Access Gap: Only 16% of people aged 15–64 participated in structured training during the 12 months preceding the survey.
    • Nearly 51% of full-time permanent workers employed in formal sector firms received employer-provided training.

Why is Lifelong Learning Becoming Important?

  • Technological Transformation: Rapid digitalisation and the spread of Artificial Intelligence (AI) are transforming traditional occupations and creating new skill requirements.
    • Automation is expected to replace repetitive and low-skill tasks, increasing demand for advanced cognitive and digital skills.
  • Green Transition: The shift towards renewable energy, sustainable industries, and climate-resilient economies is generating new employment sectors.
    • Workers require new technical and environmental skills to adapt to green jobs.
  • Demographic Changes: Aging populations in many countries and youth-heavy populations in developing nations are reshaping labour supply dynamics.
    • Lifelong learning helps older workers remain employable and enables youth to meet evolving industry needs.
  • Changing Nature of Work: Gig economy, remote work, and platform-based employment require workers to continuously upgrade their competencies.

Key Government Initiatives

  • Skill India Mission aims to train millions of youth in industry-relevant skills focusing on improving employability and bridging the skill gap.
  • Jan Shikshan Sansthan (JSS): Offers vocational training to non-literates, neo-literates, and school dropouts, focusing on rural, women, and marginalized communities.
  • National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme (NAPS): Promotes apprenticeship by offering financial support for apprentice stipends. Training includes both basic and on-the-job/practical training in industries.
  • PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY): It is the flagship skill certification scheme launched under the Skill India Mission to enhance employability among youth.
    • It seeks to provide industry-relevant short-term training, Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL), and special projects.
  • National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 has recommended integration of vocational education into mainstream education in all educational institutions.

What are the Challenges?

  • Digital Divide: Unequal access to internet connectivity and digital infrastructure limits participation in online learning.
  • Informal Workforce: In countries like India, a large informal workforce lacks institutional support for training and reskilling.
  • Financial Constraints: High training costs discourage participation among vulnerable populations.
  • Institutional Fragmentation: Lack of coordination between governments, educational institutions, and industries weakens skill ecosystems.
  • Rapid Skill Obsolescence: Technological change is making existing skills outdated at a faster pace.

ILO Recommendations

  • Inclusive Learning Systems: Ensure affordable and accessible training for women, informal workers, rural populations, and vulnerable groups.
  • Strengthen Public-Private Partnerships: Collaboration between governments, industries, and educational institutions can align training with labour market needs.
  • Flexible Learning Models: Encourage modular courses, online education, micro-credentials, and workplace learning.
  • Social Protection: Social security systems should support workers during periods of retraining and job transitions.

International Labour Organisation (ILO)

  • It is an United Nations Agency established in 1919 as part of the Treaty of Versailles that ended World War I, and it became the first specialized agency of the UN in 1946.
  • India became a founding member of the ILO in 1919, even before gaining independence. 
  • It has 187 Member states.
  • It sets labour standards, develops policies and devises programmes promoting decent work for all women and men.
  • It is the only tripartite U.N. agency that brings together governments, employers and workers.
  • It is headquartered inGeneva, Switzerland.

Source: TH

 

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