Jaya Latchmi Mutusammy had worked several years in customer service and finance in Singapore, when caring for her ailing parents and demand for healthcare workers during the coronavirus pandemic led her to change track, with help from the government.
Mutusammy, 47, is among tens of thousands who have tapped the city-state’s SkillsFuture Singapore programme, an education and training initiative for adults that has been rejigged to prepare workers for the pandemic environment.
“With my mom and dad in and out of the hospital, I saw how critical healthcare professionals were, and did a certificate course in healthcare support through SkillsFuture and got a job as a clinical assistant,” Mutusammy said.
“Then the pandemic hit, and healthcare workers became even more key,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “So I did another course in phlebotomy, as I saw drawing blood was a much-needed skill, and I did not want to be left behind.”
The coronavirus pandemic upended jobs globally, with unemployment worldwide forecast to be 20.7 crore in 2022 – compared to 18,6 crore in 2019 before the coronavirus hit, according to the International Labour Organization.
About half of all workers will need reskilling in the next five years, the World Economic Forum said in a 2020 report, and governments and corporations are crucial in ensuring low-wage workers are not forgotten.
In Asia, countries including India, Singapore and Malaysia set up skilling programmes and offered tax incentives and cash subsidies to boost learning in sectors such as information technology, healthcare and the so-called green economy.
Technology firms including Microsoft, Google, Amazon and IBM also launched global initiatives to train workers for tech jobs.
But while there was a sharp rise in people seeking online learning, particularly digital skills, during the pandemic, there is a risk of widening inequality as large sections of the population remain unable to access them, World Economic Forum noted.
“If governments and corporations do not focus on skilling the workforce and making them employable, it will lead to an unprecedented increase in social and economic inequality,” said Rituparna Chakraborty at TeamLease, a staffing firm in India.
Priority pillars
The coronavirus pandemic and the lockdowns to control its spread affected a wide range of industries, from aviation to tourism and hospitality to retail, with lakhs of workers furloughed or laid off worldwide.
Many of these jobs are not coming back, as firms have deployed automation and artificial intelligence in warehouses, grocery stores, call centres, and manufacturing plants to reduce congestion and meet stricter health rules.
By 2025, some 8.5 crore jobs may be displaced by a shift to machines, while 9.7 crore new roles related to machines and algorithms may emerge, the World Economic Forum noted.
Malaysia last year launched its digital economy blueprint, and allocated 1 billion ringgit ($240,000) in its budget this year for upskilling and reskilling programmes, while a skills pledge in New Zealand requires companies to double their on-the-job training and reskilling by 2025.
Singapore’s SkillsFuture uses big data and machine learning to monitor trends in global, regional and local jobs and skills to help workers “stay relevant and employable” with training, career coaching, webinars and subsidies for course fees.
About 5,40,000 Singaporeans participated in SkillsFuture initiatives in 2020, compared to 5,00,000 the previous year. In 2021, that figure rose to about 6,60,000 – the highest number since the launch of the programme in 2015, official data showed.
In December, the agency’s first skills report named the digital sector, the green economy and the care sector as the three “priority economic growth pillars” that can create tens of thousands of jobs in the country.
With disruptions brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic, “knowing which skills are in demand has never been more important”, said a spokesperson at SkillsFuture Singapore.
A wealthy country like Singapore, with a population of only 57 lakh, can better afford to invest in skills programmes than larger and poorer nations, said Ayesha Khanna, chief executive of ADDO AI, a Singaporean technology services firm.
“We are going to be an increasingly digital environment, and countries have to proactively help workers upskill,” said Khanna, who was on the steering committee of SkillsFuture Singapore. “The pandemic is the nudge to governments to do it.”
Gig work
Worldwide, one of the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic was the explosive growth in the gig economy, as the shift to digital transactions triggered a surge in delivery, transportation and warehouse jobs, largely filled by informal and contract workers.
In India alone, the number of gig jobs could rise to 9 crore in eight to 10 years from about 30 lakh now, according to a study by Boston Consulting Group and the Michael and Susan Dell Foundation.
With adequate protection, the gig economy can create opportunities for women and older adults and make jobs more accessible and inclusive for low-income communities, it said.
“The numbers of gig workers surged during the pandemic because people lost jobs or needed additional incomes because of medical emergencies,” said Shaik Salauddin, national general secretary of the Indian Federation of App-based Transport Workers, an advocacy group.
“Many of the delivery workers have bachelor’s, even master’s degrees – but there are no jobs, so they are continuing with gig work despite the tough conditions,” he said.
India has introduced several initiatives to tackle the skills gap, but critics say they are inadequate for the large number of people who need reskilling, and do not address the issue of fewer jobs being created for crores of the working-age population.
National unemployment peaked at 23.5% in 2020 and has remained well above 7% since, higher than the global average.
“I do not think enough is being done to enable workers to reskill and transition,” said Amit Basole, associate professor of economics at Azim Premji University.
“The potential consequences are very serious: we may be looking at long-term structural unemployment for certain kinds of workers,” Basole said. “Combined with low-quality education during the pandemic, it can mean a large mismatch of labour supply and demand.”
For Sarah Mokhtar in Singapore, reskilling for a technology job with her SkillsFuture credits was relatively easy.
The 35-year-old, who had worked in the consumer goods industry for nearly 15 years, went to a three-month tech bootcamp run by Generation Singapore, a non-profit that prepares and places workers in jobs.
She is now training as an application developer.
“There is some risk in making a career switch at this stage,” she said. “But I wanted to join an industry that is future-proof.”
This article first appeared on Thomson Reuters Foundation News.
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