(Press-News.org) Fears that most UK companies would slash investment in skills training as a result of the recession have proved to be largely unfounded, researchers at Cardiff University and the University of London have concluded. Although some employers have cut spending to the bone, total expenditure on training has reduced only slightly.
Many employers are also "training smarter", according to a new study from researchers at Cardiff University and the Centre for Learning and Life Chances in Knowledge Economies and Societies (LLAKES), at the Institute of Education, University of London. The recession has caused companies to focus their training on key business needs, organise more in-house courses, and use their own staff as trainers. They have also renegotiated contracts with external trainers and increased their involvement in e-learning.
The study's authors interviewed a wide range of public and private-sector employers representing large and small organisations. "A majority of these employers believed that they would persist in 'training smarter' when the economy recovers," they say.
The researchers also examined responses to several surveys that gather information on staff training: the CBI's Industrial Trends Survey, the British Chambers of Commerce Quarterly Economic Survey, the National Employers Skills Survey, and the Quarterly Labour Force Survey, which questions 60,000 workers about a range of issues including recent job-related education and training.
At the start of the recession many employers were anticipating sharp cuts in training expenditure, judging by the CBI data. The British Chambers of Commerce survey responses were a little more optimistic while the National Employer Skills Survey (NESS) provided further evidence that the reduction in training was not as severe as many feared. "Although a minority of NESS employers had cut spending in the previous 12 months, most reported no significant change and some had even increased their commitments," the researchers comment.
The findings of this new study suggest that the UK has seen a slow decline in training from a peak in 2001/2, rather than a recession-related crash. Total expenditure on all types of company training in England amounted to £39 billion in 2009. This was only 5 per cent less in real terms than in 2007.
The study concludes that an "overwhelming majority" of employers recognise that some types of training are essential, even in a recession. These are called "training floors". Such "floors" include training that helps firms to:
comply with legal requirements
meet operational needs
counter skills shortages
address market competition
fulfil managerial commitments, and
satisfy customer demands.
Some of the 52 employers that the study's authors interviewed also believe they now need training that 'multi-skills' their workforce. "If anything, the recession has taught me that we need to make sure that our whole workforce is trained in several tasks," one industrial employer told the researchers. "If we do have to make redundancies in the future we will then have the people to fall back on if we lose key employees."
###
"The impact of the 2008/9 recession on the extent, form and patterns of training at work", by Alan Felstead, Francis Green and Nick Jewson, is the latest research paper to be published by LLAKES. The research work for the paper was funded by the strategic partnership formed by the Economic and Social Research Council and the UK Commission for Employment and Skills.
Professor Felstead and Dr Jewson are based at the Cardiff School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University. Francis Green is Professor of Labour Economics and Skills Development at the Institute of Education. Their paper will be downloadable from the LLAKES website www.llakes.org from 9am on Wednesday, February 9.
UK companies respond to recession by 'training smarter,' study finds
2011-02-10
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Fetal surgery takes a huge step forward in treating children with spina bifida
2011-02-10
Performing delicate surgery in the womb, months before birth, can substantially improve outcomes for children with a common, disabling birth defect of the spine. Experts at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) co-led a new landmark study showing that fetal surgery for spina bifida greatly reduces the need to divert fluid from the brain, improves mobility and improves the chances that a child will be able to walk independently.
Spina bifida is the most common birth defect of the central nervous system, affecting about 1,500 babies born each year in the United ...
Hearing with your nose: How nasal stem cells could tackle childhood hearing problems
2011-02-10
Stem Cell scientists in Australia have found that patients suffering from hearing problems which began during infancy and childhood could benefit from a transplant of stem cells from their nose. The research, published today in STEM CELLS, reveals that mucosa-derived stem cells can help preserve hearing function during the early-onset of sensorineural hearing loss.
Sensorineural hearing loss is caused by the loss of sensory cells or neurons in the cochlea, the sensory organ of the inner ear responsible for hearing. The condition can have genetic causes, often arising ...
Time to reopen PFI contracts
2011-02-10
It is time to reopen private finance initiative (PFI) contracts say leading public health physician, Professor Allyson Pollock, and colleagues on bmj.com today.
Professor Pollock, who is based at the Centre for International Public Health Policy at the University of Edinburgh, argues that "NHS PFI contracts are not good value and are endangering patient care".
Since 1997 most large-scale public capital investment in the UK has been through PFI purchasing schemes where investment banks and building companies raise the finance for public infrastructure projects.
In ...
Schools often react poorly to student suicides, experts say
2011-02-10
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Many school officials react in exactly the wrong ways when one of their students completes suicide, according to the authors of a new book.
While they may be well-intentioned, administrators who don't send the right messages may make copycat suicides more likely, and are not providing the help needed by others hurting from the tragedy.
"Without the proper knowledge and resources, many school administrators may implement strategies that could actually increase the risk of suicide among students," said Darcy Haag Granello, professor of counselor education ...
New research suggests tart cherries could speed muscle recovery
2011-02-10
Tart cherries could help athletes reduce muscle damage to recover faster from a tough workout, according to new research published in the American College of Sports Medicine's journal Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise.
Researchers at the Sports and Exercise Science Research Center at London South Bank University in the UK gave 10 trained athletes 1 ounce of an antioxidant-packed tart cherry juice concentrate (provided by CherryActive) twice daily for seven days prior to and two days after an intense round of strength training. The athletes' recovery after the cherry ...
Motorcycle helmets reduce spine injuries after collisions
2011-02-10
Motorcycle helmets, long known to dramatically reduce the number of brain injuries and deaths from crashes, appear to also be associated with a lower risk of cervical spine injury, new research from Johns Hopkins suggests.
"We are debunking a popular myth that wearing a helmet while riding a motorcycle can be detrimental during a motorcycle crash," says study leader Adil H. Haider, M.D., M.P.H., an assistant professor of surgery at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "Using this new evidence, legislators should revisit the need for mandatory helmet laws. ...
The 'new' kilogram is approaching
2011-02-10
A milestone in the international Avogadro project coordinated by the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) has been reached: With the aid of a single crystal of highly enriched 28Si, the Avogadro constant has now been measured as exactly as never before with a relative overall uncertainty of 3 • 10. Within the scope of the redefinition of the kilogram, the value NA = 6.02214078(18) • 1023 mol permits the currently most exact realization of this unit. The results have been published in the most recent edition of the journal "Physical Review Letters".
The ...
Biogeochemistry at the core of global environmental solutions
2011-02-10
Millbrook, NY— If society wants to address big picture environmental problems, like global climate change, acid rain, and coastal dead zones, we need to pay closer attention to the Earth's coupled biogeochemical cycles. So reports a special issue of Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, published this month by the Ecological Society of America.
"There are nearly seven billion people on the planet. And our activities are throwing the Earth's biogeochemical cycles out of sync, to the detriment of air and water resources, climate stability, and human health," comments ...
1 factor can make mortgage modifications up to one-third more likely, study finds
2011-02-10
COLUMBUS, Ohio – One factor, little-known by borrowers, can play a large role in whether banks are willing to renegotiate mortgages with homeowners who are struggling to meet payments.
Unfortunately, it is a factor that homeowners have no control over.
Researchers found that mortgages owned by lenders were 26 to 36 percent more likely to be renegotiated than very similar mortgages that the original lenders sold to other companies, which turned them into securities.
"Homeowners don't have a say in whether their bank sells their mortgage or not, but that can have a ...
Behavioral problems linked to cortisol levels
2011-02-10
Montreal, February 9, 2011 – Cortisol, the so-called stress hormone, seems to behave in contradictory ways in children. Some youngsters with behavioral problems have abnormally high levels of cortisol, while others with identical problems have abnormally low levels. What's going on?
Researchers at Concordia University and the Centre for Research in Human Development may have resolved the cortisol paradox. In a groundbreaking study published in the journal Hormones and Behavior, they link cortisol levels not simply to behavior problems, but to the length of time individuals ...