Business/Ed Partnership Needs Strengthening
· Business – Education Partnership Needs
Strengthening
·
· Barriers to education need lowering
– not raising.
·
· Michael Barnett, Chief Executive
of the Auckland Chamber of Commerce was responding to a call
by Economic Development Minister Jim Anderton that business
groups distance themselves from the Education Forum
suggestion that students should pay more for tertiary
education.
·
· “I have some sympathy for where Jim
Anderton is coming from,” said Mr Barnett. “He has correctly
picked up a message coming from business that we have a
major skills shortage in this country.”
·
· However,
the issue for business is not just about the cost of
tertiary education, but also the appropriateness of the
courses being offered.”
·
· More than 90% of
businesses are small-medium, and employing around 20 people
who are required to be multi-skilled and with flexible
attitudes and regard for all facets of the
business.
·
· The cost of tertiary education can be
interpreted as an investment, both by the person taking a
particular course and the country seeking to ensure
businesses have available a sufficient pool of employable
and skilled professionals and trades people.
·
· Both
Government and business groups need to ask whether they are
doing enough to ensure education institutions are offering
the right mix of courses needed by a small-medium
business.
·
· He noted that Australia has a Ministry
of Small Business, through which issues are driven and
communicated, such as compliance cost mitigation and
ensuring education institutions are interfacing with the
needs of the small-business sector.
·
“Rather than
distancing ourselves from the Education Forum, the
small-business sector needs to raise its advocacy on the
practical support the tertiary sector can provide to help
get lift-off in building a bigger, better performing
economy.”