Determinants of Job Opportunities in Skill Development Institutions: Indian Perspective

Author(s):  
Manoj Kumar ◽  
Suresh Kumar Garg ◽  
Shraddha Mishra

In a fast-growing economy like India and having a comparatively young population, education, especially skill-based education, plays an important role. In the last two decades’ emphasis has been placed on this through education policy interventions at all levels of governance. Despite this, the impact is not sufficient. There is a need for the industry to associate with skill development institutions for need-based effective management programmes. This paper attempts to study the students’ perceptions of the skill development programmes and their efficiency in providing better job opportunities. The study shows a significant role of trainers, industry connections and institutes infrastructure in giving better jobs opportunities to the trainees of skill development institutes.

Author(s):  
Rama Mohana Rao Katta ◽  
Chandra Sekhar Patro

Globalization has been a significant force in the development of the market and economic environments. The micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) need to focus on technological capabilities to face the competition in the globalized market. They have to analyze the market opportunities in the rapidly growing economy as well as emerging markets. The aids of a globalized and digital economy depends to an excessive extent on favourable business environments and healthy competition. The performance of MSMEs depends on accessibility to various strategic resources like abilities, technical know-how, innovativeness, and finance. Thus, it is imperative to consider the factors influencing work conditions firm level, and the strategies formulated at the national level are organized to local business perspectives. This paper examines the global scenario of MSMEs, the impact of globalization, the role of MSMEs in India, the growth perspectives of MSMEs during the pre-and post-globalization period, the critical challenges, and the role of the government in encouraging and developing MSMEs.


Author(s):  
Guido Heineck ◽  
Regina T. Riphahn

SummaryOver the last decades the German education system underwent numerous reforms in order to improve “equality of opportunity”, i.e. to guarantee all pupils independent of parental background equal access to higher education. At the same time internationally comparative evidence yields that Germany features particularly low intergenerational mobility with respect to educational attainment. This study investigates the development in intergenerational education mobility in Germany for the birth cohorts 1929 through 1978 with respect to secondary school attainment. We test whether the impact of parental educational background on child educational outcomes changed over time. In spite of massive public policy interventions and education reforms our results yield no significant reduction in the role of parental educational background for child outcomes over the last decades.


2012 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 61-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Kamyabi ◽  
S. Devi

The role of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) is recognized globally given their contribution to total productivity and job opportunities. However, the majority of SMEs tend to fail due to a lack of marketing knowledge and managerial skills or technical expertise. Professional accountants are in a unique situation to help SME owner/managers to achieve their business objectives and bridge the skills gap. Therefore, this paper aims to identify the factors that affect the decisions of owner/managers of SMEs in Iranian manufacturing sector to utilise the professional accountants’ advisory services and to examine the impact of these advisory services on SME performance using the Resource-Based View (RBV) of the firm. Based on a questionnaire survey data of 658 Iranian manufacturing SMEs, our regression analysis reveals a significant positive relationship between utilisation of professional accountants′ advisory services and three independent variables, namely, knowledge of owner/manager, competitive intensity and complexity of marketing decisions. Furthermore, we evidence that the use of advisory services is significant and positively associated with SME performance. More importantly, utilisation of professional accountants′ advisory services partially mediates the relationship between knowledge of owner/manager, competitive intensity and complexity of marketing decisions and firm performance. Therefore, we provide a specific, theoretically and empirically grounded prediction of how utilisation of professional accountants′ advisory services influences performance with implications for theory and practice.


2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (11) ◽  
pp. 4630-4637
Author(s):  
Sudawan Somjai ◽  
Luedech Girdwichai ◽  
Thaniya Pongsiri

The purpose of this paper was to analyze the impact of entrepreneurial education on venture creation along with the mediating roles of entrepreneurial awareness, entrepreneurial mindset, and entrepreneurial skill development. Entrepreneurial Education plays a key role in offering the prospects for graduates to take in the attitude, approach, entrepreneurial mindset and skill development required for the creation of a new venture. For the current paper, the researcher selected the method of quantitative. The researcher of this paper collected data from the Thai students of a few universities. The researcher collected data from those students who were convenient to take part in the study. The findings of this research paper demonstrate that entrepreneurial education is very crucial for students to start a new venture. In this paper, the writer of the paper conducted a quantitative study and collected data from the students of the universities of Thailand. The results of the study depict that all the four hypotheses of this paper were accepted, the universities should provide educational training and education to their students so as to make them aware and develop their mindsets which will assist them in the creation of the venture.


Nutrients ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 710 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie Cassin ◽  
Daniel Buchman ◽  
Samantha Leung ◽  
Karin Kantarovich ◽  
Aceel Hawa ◽  
...  

The concept of food addiction has generated much controversy. In comparison to research examining the construct of food addiction and its validity, relatively little research has examined the broader implications of food addiction. The purpose of the current scoping review was to examine the potential ethical, stigma, and health policy implications of food addiction. Major themes were identified in the literature, and extensive overlap was identified between several of the themes. Ethics sub-themes related primarily to individual responsibility and included: (i) personal control, will power, and choice; and (ii) blame and weight bias. Stigma sub-themes included: (i) the impact on self-stigma and stigma from others, (ii) the differential impact of substance use disorder versus behavioral addiction on stigma, and (iii) the additive stigma of addiction plus obesity and/or eating disorder. Policy implications were broadly derived from comparisons to the tobacco industry and focused on addictive foods as opposed to food addiction. This scoping review underscored the need for increased awareness of food addiction and the role of the food industry, empirical research to identify specific hyperpalatable food substances, and policy interventions that are not simply extrapolated from tobacco.


2000 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 20-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shobha Ahuja

The findings of the paper suggest that investment in human capital would depend strongly on sustained economic growth accompanied by education and skill development of the workforce. The paper examines, in detail, the factors which are likely to influence the demand for human capital in the coming decades and points to the preponderance of economic factors in influencing demand in the market-place though social indicators also play a predominant role. In a growing economy it is important to identity the employment intensive sectors and train our human resources to enable them to meet the demand in these sectors. The paper seeks to identify the areas where there exists a good potential for employment generation and makes suggestions for tailoring skill development to meet the demand in the marketplace. Against this backdrop it can be concluded that HRD in the new millennium would depend on a variety of economic and social indications and on the stake of human resources in the production process.


2021 ◽  
Vol 50 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Kavanagh ◽  
Nicola Fortune ◽  
George Disney ◽  
Zoe Aitken ◽  
Samia Badji

Abstract Focus and outcomes for participants The symposium will focus on the role of epidemiologists in building an evidence base to improve the health of the 15% of the world’s population with disability who currently experience vast health inequalities. Participants will be introduced to new ways of conceptualising disability in epidemiology; state of the art approaches to monitoring disability-related socio-economic and health inequalities; methodological challenges and solutions to address the biases due to misclassification, confounding and reverse causation; and the application of causal mediation analysis and natural experiments in identifying potential policy solutions. Participants will gain a greater understanding of how epidemiological methods can be applied to improve the health of people with disability, as well as insights and ideas for their research. A network of epidemiologists interested in this topic will be generated to foster ongoing communication and collaborative opportunities. Rationale for the symposium, including for its inclusion in the Congress The health of disabled people has largely been ignored by epidemiologists. This is despite emerging evidence that people with disability experience poorer health because of factors unrelated to their impairment, including socio-economic disadvantage, discrimination, and violence. However, turning epidemiologists’ efforts to the health of people with disability presents conceptual and methodological challenges, some of which are unique to the content area. Participants will be shown a suite of approaches that can be deployed to address these problems. Participatory methods and innovative graphical and statistical methods for analysing disability-related health inequalities, approaches rarely used in epidemiology, will be covered. The symposium will also concentrate on the application of methods to optimise causal inference in the presence of multiple potential biases, and methods that simulate randomised controlled trial conditions to model policy interventions. Presentation program The presentations are from researchers from the CRE-DH, funded through Australia’s National Health and Medical Research Council organised four themes. Theme 1: Conceptualisation of disability We will present findings from a scoping review of original articles in epidemiology journals and will argue that, while, disability is usually conceptualised in epidemiology as an outcome, reconceiving of disability as an exposure, mediator and/or effect modifier can provide important insights on the determinants of health of people with disability. Theme 2: Monitoring disability-related inequalities We will demonstrate how the CRE-DH has used participatory methods, where people with disability are ‘experts through lived experience’, to develop indicators to monitor disability-related inequalities and design a National Community Attitudes survey. We will demonstrate innovative ways to graphically illustrate prevalence, absolute and relative inequalities simultaneously, and discuss how hierarchical Bayesian methods can be used to overcome inadequate power due to disaggregation and assess inequalities under uncertainty. Theme 3: Approaches to minimising bias We will talk about how biases can affect estimates of disability prevalence and disability-outcome associations, including reverse causation, confounding and misclassification. We will discuss a range of approaches we have used to address these challenges including modelling incident (rather than prevalent) disability, using fixed effects models and propensity score approaches, and approaches to addressing misclassification bias drawing on examples from our program of research. Theme 4: Identification of policy interventions We will discuss methods that can be used to model the impact of policies on the health of people with disability using examples from our research. We will present the results of a causal mediation analysis modelling the impact of different employment policy interventions on mental health outcomes. We will illustrate the value of natural policy experiments for estimating effects of policy changes on employment and health of people with disability using two examples – the 2014 reassessment of Disability Support Pensioners under stricter impairment tables and the introduction of Australia’s National Disability Insurance Scheme. The symposium will conclude with a facilitated discussion focussed on how epidemiologists can come together internationally to grasp the opportunities and address the challenges in research focussed on the health of people with disabilities. Names of presenters Professor Anne Kavanagh, PhD Dr Nicola Fortune, PhD Dr George Disney, PhD Dr Zoe Aitken Dr Samia Badji, PhD


Author(s):  
Ahmed Hamed Ahmed Koufan -    Samir Marwan Hamami

The study aimed to investigate the impact of personal factors and family and the surrounding environment in the establishment of the pilot project and to identify the relative importance of each factor of personal factors, and analysis of statistical relationship between them and the establishment of the private project, who plays the role of great importance in the development of economic development and community-based organizations, the multiplicity of sources of income, providing job opportunities for the high rate, where formed a sample search of (474) personnel, university professors and university students, as was the distribution of (474) identification. It was tested hypotheses search containing statistical method descriptive, and testing and analysis Al-ameli Factor analysis and the use of the regression technique between the variables using the statistical program SPSS.


Politik ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rasmus Kehlet Berg ◽  
Janek Bligaard Eskildsen ◽  
Jens Villiam Hoff ◽  
Jette Bredahl Jacobsen ◽  
Ole Gravgaard Pedersen ◽  
...  

Through decades, the natural sciences have documented some troubling links between the growing economy and damages to the environment, most prominent of which are global warming and the loss of biodiversity. Recent years have however shown that the road from identifying the problems to action is slow and complicated to navigate: The goal to reduce greenhouse gas emissions does not stand alone; rather it is weighed against numerous other policy objectives. This paper first outlines a way of measuring the links between economic activity and the environment: The Green GDP. This measure attempts to measure the environmental damages in the same metric as other economic activity, thus informing us on whether or not economic growth comes at the expense of the environment. Next, the paper introduces a research project aimed at developing the GREEN REFORM model that can simulate the environmental effects of economic policy as well as the impact of environmental policy on the economy. While the Green GDP is an indication of the environmental costs of current and past economic activity, the GREEN REFORM model can be used for evaluation of future scenarios and policy interventions. Finally, the paper presents an analysis of the political barriers to adopting the above-mentioned tools in decision-making in a Danish context. The paper argues that while there is some demand for the tools, there is a potential for significant opposition in the form of political-economy constraints.


2018 ◽  
Vol 26 (100) ◽  
pp. 968-985
Author(s):  
Mark Webb ◽  
Indira Kuntuova ◽  
Aliya Karabayeva

Abstract Qualitative changes in social life affect accumulating young people’s knowledge as a basis of human capital. The article aims to explore the role of education in human capital development due to ongoing changes in modern society. The study is based on the theory of human capital explaining an economic approach to human behaviour, which highlights effects of investing in human capital on the country’s socioeconomic development. Schultz’s theoretical framework foregrounds the role of education in realising human capital and the relevant research methods such as content analysis and textual narrative synthesis. The main findings embrace opinions of philosophers from different epochs, ideas on knowledge of society in the XXI century, and the role of education described as the basis of the young population ready for socioeconomic development. The results prove the hypothesis relative to exploring the impact of education and training on the youth’s human capital.


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