Many countries have seen recent growth in technology-facilitated forms of work, such as crowd work and on-demand work via apps and platforms; but there has also been growth in other new forms of work, like casual work (on-call, voucher-based and zero‑hour contracts, as well as mini/flexi-jobs). Moreover, growth in subcontracting and outsourcing has prompted an increase in own-account work.
For some workers, these “new” forms of work provide income top-ups, while others appreciate the flexibility that they offer in how and where to work, resulting in a better work-life balances. However, for many other workers, these new forms of work imply lower job quality, whether it be lower job security, less social protection, wage penalties or a lack of voice). Recent evidence has suggested that job mobility in the labour market has increased and that tenure, once population ageing is controlled for, is declining (OECD, 2019[1]). These trends, which tend to affect youth and the low-skilled in particular, are worrying from the perspective of job quality and the sustainability of social protection systems.
Increased mobility in the labour market driven by a rise in non-standard work also raises concerns about training. Already, OECD research has indicated an important deficit in training as economies undergo important structural transformations with a decline in manufacturing jobs and a rise in service jobs (OECD, 2019[1]). These challenges become even greater in countries that are experiencing a rise in the number of non-standard workers who, on average, have a lower probability of participating in training. In some cases, such workers may have no employer responsible for financing their training since they are working as independent contractors. In other cases, workers either have several employers or frequently change employer, so that the latter have little incentive to invest in the skills of workers with whom they will have only very short working relationships. Many workers in these new forms of work may also struggle to gain access to good information, advice and guidance. Finally, working conditions could make training more difficult, for example when working time and place are not well defined. These are challenges that are also shared by workers in more “traditional” non-standard contracts, including temporary and self-employed workers.
In this context, the idea of giving individuals an individual account for learning/training has received a lot of interest in policy circles. Such an account would allow individuals to accumulate training rights, carry them over between jobs and employment status, and promote individual investments in lifelong learning. While there is much talk about such accounts and many countries are considering setting one up, relatively little is known about them. The purpose of this report is to develop guidance for policy makers in designing such accounts, and to provide a check list of things to consider to make such schemes successful. The approach used is to look at experiences with existing/past schemes through a detailed case study approach and literature review.
One of the challenges encountered is that, to date, only one real individual learning account exists: the Compte Personnel de Formation in France. The report therefore takes a broader approach by looking at “individual learning schemes” (ILS), which include: i) actual individual accounts where rights/savings for training – financed by the individual and supported by the state and, in some cases, the employer – are accumulated over time; as well as ii) training voucher schemes which support training through direct governmental payments, sometimes with a contribution from the participant. ILS are not new and they were initially introduced in the early 1990s with the objective of creating a “market” for skills whereby individuals are empowered to choose their own training among a set of courses offered by providers competing against each another. The current, interest in ILAs is slightly different and focuses mostly on their potential to attach training rights to individuals rather than jobs, and therefore their ability to make training rights more portable between jobs and from one employment status to another. This is a main objective of the Compte Personnel de Formation implemented in France since 2015, as well as of the recently created Canada Training Credit.
Six new case studies were commissioned by the OECD for the purpose of this report.1 The case studies include: the French Compte Personnel de Formation, the Upper Austrian Bildungskonto, the Scottish Individual Learning Accounts/Individual Training Accounts, the Singapore SkillsFuture Credit, the Tuscan Carta ILA, and the Individual Training Accounts in Michigan and Washington in the United States.2 The case studies, based on common terms of reference, used available data and possible existing evaluations as well as qualitative material collected in interviews of various actors involved in the schemes.
The report takes stock of these experiences and of others described in the literature, with the ultimate aim of identifying the advantages and disadvantages of such schemes, as well as the key trade-offs and questions to consider in designing a successful scheme. The lessons learnt are relevant to the design of individual learning accounts, but also to individual learnings schemes (as defined above) more broadly. Section 1 starts by defining individual learning schemes and discussing their objectives. Section 2 reviews the design of these schemes. Section 3 provides evidence on outcomes, in particular on participation and the type of training undertaken. Section 4 discusses the extent to which ILS manage to increase participation among groups usually under‑represented in training. Section 5 examines training quality issues associated with ILS. Finally, Section 6 provides some conclusions and discusses trade-offs emerging from the analysis.
This report received financial support from the German Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs. It was written by Ann Vourc’h under the supervision of Stijn Broecke. Statistical work was carried out by Dana Blumin, technical assistance was provided by Katerina Kodlova and editorial assistance by Lucy Hulett. The report benefited from comments from Glenda Quintini, Anja Meierkord and Marieke Vandeweyer from the OECD Directorate for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs, Dana-Carmen Bachmann from the Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion of the European Commission, Coralie Perez from the Centre d’Economie de la Sorbonne, Denis Donoghue from Hall Aitken, and Randall W. Eberts from W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment and Research.