This article argues that a flawed, Private Industry Councils - style, output related funding regime which promoted creaming was imported into Britain. In this system low cost training is delivered, at the cost of both high-cost, high-skill and those with special needs provision. Intriguing research questions can be posed on the desination of the savings produced through cost-cutting and output related funding. Apart from bank interest induced cash surpluses, evidence drawn from Employment Department documentation, appears to show that TECs are switching surpluses made from training the unemployed toward underpinning their economic development initiatives. -from Author</p
Since the Industrial Training Act of 1964, the UK government has adopted a variety of policies inten...
The British government's strategy of driving the market principle into every area of policy is evalu...
The objective of this paper is to review, from a TEC perspective, the effect of changing Conservativ...
This article argues that a flawed, Private Industry Councils - style, output related funding regime ...
This article provides the background and subtext to a series of concerns recently raised on the degr...
Current British government economic development policy emphasises regional and sub-regional scale, m...
In recent years, the debate over reform to national vocational education and training systems has sh...
While the need for a greater volume of vocational training is widely recognised, it is unlikely to b...
The UK Employment Department's follow-up research to the 1989-90 study Baseline Study Prior to the I...
Pressure on employers to train their employees has seldom been higher as evidence accumulates that t...
The way is now being paved for a major upheaval to the post-compulsory education and training system...
In the paper we critically examine Jessop's regulationist theorisation of state restructuring, focus...
web-site: http://ec.europa.eu/economy_finance/publications/european_economy/2004/eesp304en.pdfI use ...
Training for the unemployed has played an important role in recent labour market policies in the Uni...
One rationale for devolution is that local decision makers may be well placed to adapt national poli...
Since the Industrial Training Act of 1964, the UK government has adopted a variety of policies inten...
The British government's strategy of driving the market principle into every area of policy is evalu...
The objective of this paper is to review, from a TEC perspective, the effect of changing Conservativ...
This article argues that a flawed, Private Industry Councils - style, output related funding regime ...
This article provides the background and subtext to a series of concerns recently raised on the degr...
Current British government economic development policy emphasises regional and sub-regional scale, m...
In recent years, the debate over reform to national vocational education and training systems has sh...
While the need for a greater volume of vocational training is widely recognised, it is unlikely to b...
The UK Employment Department's follow-up research to the 1989-90 study Baseline Study Prior to the I...
Pressure on employers to train their employees has seldom been higher as evidence accumulates that t...
The way is now being paved for a major upheaval to the post-compulsory education and training system...
In the paper we critically examine Jessop's regulationist theorisation of state restructuring, focus...
web-site: http://ec.europa.eu/economy_finance/publications/european_economy/2004/eesp304en.pdfI use ...
Training for the unemployed has played an important role in recent labour market policies in the Uni...
One rationale for devolution is that local decision makers may be well placed to adapt national poli...
Since the Industrial Training Act of 1964, the UK government has adopted a variety of policies inten...
The British government's strategy of driving the market principle into every area of policy is evalu...
The objective of this paper is to review, from a TEC perspective, the effect of changing Conservativ...