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                        Introduction | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.1  | 
                        There is good and bad news with regards to  careers, training and employment in the Australian manufacturing sector. While  there is plenty of opportunity for Australians to develop diverse careers in this  developing sector, there is little desire on the part of young people, in  particular, to do so. This is largely due to the wide range of other employment  opportunities available in the current economic conditions and poor community attitudes  towards the industry.  | 
                      
                      
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                        Employment options and opportunities in the  manufacturing sector | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.2 | 
                        There are a growing number of opportunities for  employment in the manufacturing sector—as lines are blurring between some industries  within the manufacturing and services sectors and the science/innovation field.  This considerably broadens the scope of employment in the industry.                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.3 | 
                        Manufacturing today employs a wide range of  capabilities and qualifications. Not only are technical and research skills  required but increasingly, sophisticated logistics and marketing skills as well.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.4  | 
                        The industry employs the semi‑skilled, trade and  university qualified and is seeing a steady rise in university qualified  technicians and scientists at the development end.  | 
                      
                      
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                        The skills shortage | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.5  | 
                        Careers and employment in the manufacturing  sector operate within the wider context of an Australian skills shortage, in  which demand for skilled labour outstrips supply.1 
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                        | 6.6  | 
                        Of all the factors affecting production, the  March 2007 quarter issue of the Survey  of Australian Manufacturing reported ‘labour shortages were the largest  drag on production.’2 
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                        | 6.7 | 
                        The Victorian Government submission claims ‘one  in two manufacturing companies experience difficulties in obtaining skilled  labour’ and it cites electricians, engineers, mechanics, welders, plant  managers and sheet metal workers as being highly sought after.3 The Treasury Autumn 2007 Economic  Roundup confirms this view in results from business liaison: 
                          Skill shortages are particularly  viewed as a problem ... by companies with workers such as engineers and  electricians whose skills are readily transferable to the mining sector.4 
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                        | 6.8  | 
                        The Department of Education, Science and  Training (DEST) note in their submission that the national priorities of the Commonwealth–State/Territory Agreement for  Skilling Australia’s Workforce include addressing skills shortages ‘in  traditional trades and in emerging industries.’5 The submission also highlights the particular skills shortages experienced in regional  areas and how the Targeting Skills Needs in Regions programme is focussing on  addressing this problem in ‘regions of strategic economic importance.’6 
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                        | 6.9  | 
                        The skills shortage is compounded by new  technologies that demand increased and diversified skill sets from  manufacturing workers. Furthermore, the greatest barrier to innovation being  undertaken in Australian innovating businesses is a lack of skilled staff.7 This impediment affects the manufacturing sector disproportionately; it being  the most innovative of sectors.  
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                        | 6.10 | 
                        The February 2006 COAG communiqué on A New National Approach to Apprenticeships,  Training and Skills Recognition identified the ‘growing need for higher  level skills’ as an area requiring further reform in Australia.8 Similarly, the Australian Industry Group (Ai Group) has reported that a higher  level, broader range and more frequently updated set of skills is required by  the manufacturing sector.9 
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                        An image problem for manufacturing | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.11 | 
                        At a time when new and existing skills are in  high demand, manufacturing careers are not. While the industry has moved on  from the ‘dark satanic mills’ of centuries ago, the community still sees  manufacturing as a ‘dirty’ or diminishing industry. This makes recruitment of new  workforce participants and workers from other fields/sectors who are prepared  to retrain, a challenge. This backdrop may also deter those already in  manufacturing from up-skilling. The poor perception of the sector is  exacerbated by reports of declining employment trends which do not consider the  dynamism of the sector nor the emerging work opportunities.10 The Victorian Government noted:  
                          The perception of manufacturing remains outdated and unfortunately  unattractive. The resultant effects of the poor image include difficulties in  recruiting fresh talent, in obtaining finance for growth and in carrying weight  in national policy development.11 
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                        | 6.12 | 
                        There is anecdotal evidence that parents and  teachers discourage young people from jobs in manufacturing because they think the  industry is moving offshore, in demise and holds little career prospects—as Mr Brett Manwaring, chief financial officer of  regional Victorian textiles company, Bruck Textiles, noted: 
                          Fifteen years ago, if you were in Wangaratta you were told, ‘If you do  well at school you’ll get a job at Bruck.’ It has changed to: ‘If you don’t do well  at school, you’ll get a job at Bruck.’12 
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                        | 6.13  | 
                        There is a role for both government and industry  to promote to the broader community the genuine opportunities and career  pathways available in the manufacturing industry. Mr Paul Laver, vice president of  the Australian   Academy of Technological  Sciences and Engineering (AATSE) told the committee: 
                          I think they [parents and teachers] have to start telling them  [students] that you put up with hell while you do your four years as an  apprentice, but within a couple of years of that, if you wanted to live outside  a capital city, you could probably be up in the $80,000 to $100,000 range quite  easily.13 
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                        | 6.14 | 
                        The UK Government has championed manufacturing  through its Manufacturing Strategy (2002 & 2004) focusing on industry’s metamorphosis  from antiquated factories and repetitive shop floors to sustainability, clean  production lines and cutting edge scientific research—this is a good working  model for Australian governments to follow.14 
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                        | 6.15 | 
                        Similarly, the Victorian Government’s 2003  Manufacturing Policy, Agenda for New Manufacturers,  challenges manufacturers (among other things) to: 
  - ‘highlight  manufacturing’s links to industrial design, biotechnology, information technology and  the services sector.
 
   - contribute to the marketing and public  information efforts of industry bodies; and
 
 - encourage graduates to apply for rewarding  manufacturing careers and make them feel welcome when they are  successful.’15
  
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                        | 6.16 | 
                        At an anecdotal level, young people respond positively  to information about the sector. Mr Manwaring continued: When we actually go to them [students] and show them the opportunities  that are there, they are just blown away.16 
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                        Occupational  Health and Safety | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.17  | 
                        While Chapter 3 discusses the regulatory  burden that occupational health and safety (OH&S) places on manufacturers,  poor perceptions of OH&S in manufacturing also have a detrimental effect on  its image as a viable career option. The National OH&S Strategy 2002–2012  identified manufacturing as one of the four priority target industries as a  result of its high OH&S incidence rates and workers’ compensation claims.17  
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                        | 6.18 | 
                        In 2004–05, 28 770 manufacturing workers  made compensation claims, accounting for 20 per cent of all workers’  compensation claims where the employee was off work for one week or more. While  the incidence rate of claims in the manufacturing industry has fallen from 40  claims per 1000 employees (1996–97) to 31 claims per 1000 employees (2003–04),  it is almost twice as high as the overall rate for Australia, at 17 claims per  1000 employees and is the second highest of all industries.18 
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                        | 6.19 | 
                        Additional concerns have been raised about the  unknown health implications of working with new technologies, such as  nanotechnology.19 
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                        | 6.20 | 
                        The 2006 National Industry Skills Report notes  that some industries (not specifically manufacturing) need to proactively  counter public perceptions about safety records in order to attract workers.20 Harmonised national OH&S standards would assist with this.  
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                        Science and manufacturing                           | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.21  | 
                        The National Manufacturing Summit noted in  December 2005 that research, development and innovation skills ‘are  critical for the future growth and development of Australia’s manufacturing  sector.’21 
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                        | 6.22  | 
                        Attracting and retaining people with science  skills was similarly identified by Science Industry Australia (SIA) as a key  challenge for the innovation industry, which is heavily reliant on human  capital to create and maintain its competitive global advantage.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.23 | 
                        While Australia cannot feasibly keep up with the  600 000 engineers that China reports it graduates each year, or the ‘PhD  factories’ of India, there is yet to be a concerted and serious response to  up-skilling the pool of Australia’s scientific expertise.22 
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                        | 6.24 | 
                        A May 2007 report by the Australian Centre  for Education Research found that there is a ‘crisis’ in science education in Australia.  Australian students are registering low and decreasing levels of interest in  science, in part, because it is not presented as relevant to their lives.  Students also have little understanding of what a career in science could hold  for them: 
                          The dominant mode of school and tertiary science has somehow got out of  kilter with the needs and interests of contemporary  society and contemporary youth.23 
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                        | 6.25 | 
                        AATSE noted that substandard science teaching at  school has a flow on effect for future Australian students and teachers, as  well as industry: 
                          Science literacy in primary  schools is abysmal and as a consequence kids are not being excited by science.  We are getting into a situation where it is becoming a self-perpetuating wheel,  because the fewer the kids that are getting interested in science the fewer the  good science teachers that we are going to have to teach the next generation.24 
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                        | 6.26 | 
                        The inquiry heard evidence that Australia’s  edge in fields such as biotechnology is under threat from economies that are investing  more heavily in science teaching. Taiwan was cited as an example: 
                          The [Taiwanese] National Science  Council actually sponsors a program on nanotechnology for kids from  kindergarten to year 12, so kids in primary school are learning about  nanotechnology. We [Australia]  cannot get teachers who can teach kids about electricity or gravity, but here  are the Taiwanese teaching primary school kids about nanotechnology.25 
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                        | 6.27 | 
                        Senior high school and university enrolments in  science courses have dropped. From 1978 to  2002, Year 12 biology enrolments fell from 55 per cent to just  over 20 per cent, chemistry enrolments from 30 per cent to  15 per cent, and physics enrolments from 27 per cent to 12 per cent.  The number of university students enrolled in physical and materials sciences  fell by over 31 per cent between 1989 and 2002.26  
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                        | 6.28 | 
                        SIA observed that science graduates are well‑schooled  in theory, but have not had adequate practical training: Our issue is generally not one of  knowledge, because when our people come out of a science degree they have the  knowledge, they just don’t have the skill.27 
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                        | 6.29 | 
                        A further issue with some graduates and skilled  migrants in the science/technology area is their poor English and verbal  communication skills, which can serve to make them ‘unemployable.’28 
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                        | 6.30 | 
                        There are government initiatives addressing  issues around curricula and communications skills. The committee notes that  DEST received $13 million over two years in the 2007–08 Budget to  work with states and territories to develop core curricula standards in  subjects that include maths, physics, chemistry and biology for Years 11  and 12 and maths and science for Year 10. This follows the recent  commitment made by governments at the Ministerial Council on Education,  Employment, Training and Youth Affairs (MCEETYA) to develop nationally‑consistent  curricula for English, maths and science. Furthermore, the Government announced  $67 million over four years to continue the Workplace English Language and  Literacy Programme in the 2007–08 Budget, to fund organisations to train  workers in English language, literacy and numeracy.   | 
                      
                      
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                        Conclusions | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.31 | 
                        The committee concludes that the manufacturing  sector is evolving into a complex industry that is not simply concerned with  ‘making things’ but also innovation, research and high‑technology. This provides  a multitude of employment opportunities for workers of all ages and stages.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.32 | 
                        These opportunities are balanced with the  ‘double‑edged sword’ of a shortage of manufacturing skills at a time when new  technologies demand new and improved skill levels, which are more regularly  updated.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.33 | 
                        The committee concludes that skills shortages  are being experienced in some areas of manufacturing where skill-sets are  transferable to the mining sector. In addition, difficulties in attracting new  employees to fill skills shortages in manufacturing are exacerbated by the sector’s  poor public image—working in manufacturing is not seen as a viable career by  many prospective employees. The community perceive it as an unsafe, dirty and  diminishing industry that holds little career prospects. Whilst the committee  recognises that some industries of this ilk remain, there may be insufficient  community awareness of the many manufacturers offering attractive and  increasingly interesting working environments.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.34 | 
                        Targeted, government‑initiated communications  campaigns are required to address these misconceptions, promoting the  opportunities available in the manufacturing sector—for employees with diverse  skill levels—and countering claims that the sector is moving offshore and that  working environments are unpleasant.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.35 | 
                        Good quality science education is critical for  the future growth and development of Australia’s innovation and  manufacturing sectors. It is of great concern, therefore, that science  education is experiencing a decline in Australia—in terms of secondary and  tertiary student uptake, quality of teaching and relevance of curricula.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.36 | 
                        The committee notes the importance of practical  and interesting (not just ‘core’) primary and secondary curricula that engage  students, equip them with up‑to‑date science and mathematics skills, and  encourage the pursuit of science and innovation related careers. However, such  curricula must be backed by adequate resources and appropriate teacher training.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.37 | 
                         The  committee heard concerns that the university environment is not vocationally  oriented. The committee concluded that the workplace is the best environment in  which to learn vocational skills using the knowledge acquired at university.  The value of a theoretical and broad-based learning platform at the university  level should not be underestimated. It enables graduates to innovatively apply  broad knowledge in a practical environment, rather than merely accepting  conventional wisdom. Australia needs science and technology graduates who  ‘think outside the square’. | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.38 | 
                        Recommendation 13The committee recommends that the manufacturing industry, with the  support of the Australian Government, develop a coordinated communications  strategy for promoting the career opportunities in manufacturing, especially in  innovative, knowledge based manufacture.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.39 | 
                        Recommendation 14
                        The committee recommends that the Ministerial  Council on Education, Employment, Training and Youth Affairs consider the  necessary resources provision and teacher training needs to introduce updated  primary and secondary school science curricula with a focus on practical and up‑to‑date  information about emerging technologies.  | 
                      
                      
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                        Keeping skilled labour                        | 
                        
                      
                        An exodus from manufacturing to resources? | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.40 | 
                        A strong manufacturing industry in terms of human  capital is comprised of a tertiary educated workforce in combination with  technicians, trainees and apprentices.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.41 | 
                        The committee heard anecdotal evidence that valuable  skilled labour is being lost to the mining industry where more attractive  salaries are being offered. Comparable skill sets in these industries mean that  cross-poaching can occur in some areas. The Department of Industry, Tourism and  Resources (DITR) noted in their submission that skills shortages in the mining  sector for mechanical fitters, electrical tradespeople and boilermakers could  be filled by transfers from manufacturing.29 However, DITR also note that this shift constitutes only a very small  proportion of total manufacturing employment. 
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                        | 6.42 | 
                        There is little evidence that this movement is  occurring in the high-tech manufacturing areas, however, at the lower skill  levels there has been some movement and the committee’s concurrent inquiryinto Australia’s services export sector heard  similar information with respect to the services industry.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.43 | 
                        There may be opportunities to attract drought‑affected  farmers and rural workers to manufacturing in regional areas, as they  frequently possess a variety of applicable skills, as TAFE NSW noted: 
                          One of the things we are looking at is the ability to engage people who  are coming off the farms … We are looking at ways in which we can recognise  their existing skills and perhaps help them into a qualification which will  make them employable  ...  As you will be well aware, people who work in  rural environments are often multiskilled and multitalented.30 
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                        An exodus to other sectors? | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.44 | 
                        Of greater  concern is the phenomenon of workers ‘going off their tools’ and being  attracted by higher salaries and better conditions in other industries or  sectors, such as engineering, geology or merchant banking.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.45 | 
                        This is also evidenced in the loss of teaching  expertise, particularly in the Vocational Education and Training (VET) system.  Despite some professional loading, the salaries for trained technicians and  professionals are far greater in industry than in the education system, making  it difficult to gain and retain high quality teaching staff.  Dr    Julie Wells,  director of policy and planning at RMIT University, discussed the issue: 
                          The fact that skills shortages mean people can command quite high  salaries in the trades also poses particular problems for training providers,  because the salaries that we pay our staff are often not comparable with what  they can earn in the industry sector, despite the fact that we will offer  industry loadings. It is a double-edged sword, I think, for skills acquisition.31 
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                        Demographic pressures | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.46 | 
                        The manufacturing industry is set to lose an  increasing and disproportionate number of retiring workers over the next decade.  The industry has a top-heavy structure in terms of age: 15 to 24 year‑olds  make up 14 per cent of the manufacturing workforce, while 55 to 64 year‑olds  make up 51 per cent.32 
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                        | 6.47 | 
                        When older workers retire as part of the ‘baby  boomer bubble’, labour as well as skills will be lost from the industry if they  are not refreshed by younger workers. Mr Manwaring  noted some employees had worked in his textiles company for 40 years.33 This was also noted by Dr Wells: 
                          Our population is ageing and we are having to focus on engaging young  people who have perhaps fallen out of the education system and also on the need  for workers at the other end to stay in the workforce and reskill and upskill,  but we are surrounded by countries where the demographics are reversed.34  
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                        | 6.48 | 
                        The impact of the bubble bursting could be  softened by maintaining older workers, through part time or flexible hours and  harnessing their expertise in teaching and mentoring roles.35 
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                        | 6.49 | 
                        Compensating for the changing demography of the manufacturing  workforce should also involve targeting more mature workers (not simply those  straight out of high-school), with good salaries and accelerated training.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.50 | 
                        Mr   Nixon Apple,  industry and investment policy advisor with the Australian Council of Train  Unions, had a more positive perspective on the ageing population—as one  creating opportunity for younger manufacturers to reposition Australian firms  in the global market: One of the great things about the ageing of the population is that you  are going to have a huge turnover in the people who currently own and run small  manufacturing businesses in Australia.  This generational change offers a huge opportunity.36 
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                        Skilled migration | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.51 | 
                        A thorough investigation into increased skilled  migration was outside the parameters of the inquiry, and indeed there was  little substantive discussion of the issue in evidence presented to the committee.  However, it is one possible means of addressing skills shortages in Australian  manufacturing.37 
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                        | 6.52 | 
                        Skilled migration is an official component of Australia’s  migration policy, with both Commonwealth and state programmes in place to  attract skilled migrants.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.53 | 
                        At the Commonwealth level, the skills stream is  designed for migrants with ‘skills or outstanding abilities that will  contribute to the Australian economy’. According to the Department of  Immigration and Citizenship: 
                       - In 2005-06 the  skill stream represented approximately 68 per cent of the Migration  Programme, up from 65 per cent in 2004–05;
 
                         - In 2005-06, the  outcome in the State Specific and Regional Migration initiatives was increased by  47 per cent on 2004–05 to 27 490; and
 
                        - The skill  stream planning level for 2006–07 is the same as 2005–06.38
  
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                        Conclusions | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.54 | 
                        The committee believes that strategies to  improve careers and skills in the manufacturing industry should address  existing workers as well as prospective ones—university educated personnel are  indeed a vital component of the industry, but so too are technicians, trainees  and apprentices.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.55 | 
                        It is of concern that the manufacturing sector  is losing employees in several key cohorts. While the committee heard evidence  that manufacturing workers are being lost to the mining industry, this trend is  currently only affecting a small proportion of total manufacturing employment.  Of greater concern are the skills that are being lost as the baby boomers, and  the generation prior to them, retire. In particular, vocational training skills  are being lost in this way and also to the higher salaries offered in industry.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.56 | 
                        The committee concludes that creative and  adaptive approaches need to be taken to maintain workers and attract new  sectors of the workforce to manufacturing. Older workers in particular, should  not be cast aside as they reach retirement age. Rather, they should be  encouraged to keep a foot in the industry’s door, through measures such as  flexible working hours and harnessing their skills in teaching or mentoring  roles.    | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.57  | 
                        Mature workers and ex‑farm workers were also  identified by the committee as groups that may have compatible skill sets for  manufacturing and who could be attracted to the manufacturing industry with  good salaries and re‑training opportunities.    | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.58  | 
                        The committee notes that skilled migration is a  significant and growing component of Australia’s migration programme. It  is also one means of addressing skills shortages in manufacturing, in the short‑term,  both with respect to undersupplied and lapsed skill areas.  | 
                      
                      
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                        The skills gap  | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.59  | 
                        Just as there is a skills shortage within the  manufacturing industry, so too is there a ‘skills gap’. Existing workers do not  necessarily have the right skills to perform the tasks required of them as a  result of changing technological demands.39 
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                        | 6.60  | 
                        Many employees in the manufacturing industry  have been trained to perform a particular skill or narrow set of competencies.  Tailored training is now possible through many state and territory TAFEs and is  a good mechanism to fill skill shortages at short notice.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.61  | 
                        However, this emphasis on job-specific skills  means that training and skill‑sets are not easily transferable across the  industry and exacerbate the notion that manufacturing is a ‘dead end’ career.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.62  | 
                        There are also many people employed in the  manufacturing sector who have sophisticated skills, despite lacking a formal  qualification. Again this limits their mobility in the manufacturing sector. Mr Kimble   Fillingham, general manager, TAFE  business, TAFE NSW noted: 
                          Many of the people in the manufacturing sector are highly skilled,  although they do not have a piece of paper.40 
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                        | 6.63  | 
                        One answer to this issue is the development of new  paraprofessional qualifications such as associate diplomas which ‘reduce  training time and enable professional recognition for technicians.’41 
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                        | 6.64  | 
                        Another answer is ‘recognition of prior learning’—an  existing government strategy for minimising superfluous training of already‑skilled  but un‑qualified workers, attracting funding and Commonwealth‑State  partnerships under the February 2006 COAG reform agenda.42 
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                        | 6.65  | 
                        Similarly, the Skilling the Existing Workforce project is an Australian Government  initiative aimed at skilling the adult population without post‑school  qualifications. Led by Ai Group, the project is aimed at blending formal and  informal learning and tailoring training to the specific adult audience and is  currently at the consultation stage, due for completion in 2008.43 
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                        Vocational Education and Training – skilling new  and older workers | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.66  | 
                        The vocational education and training (VET)  sector provides for non-university, post‑school learning in technical skills  and trades. The Australian Government is solely responsible for funding the  higher education sector and has a leadership/funding role for schools and  vocational education and training, largely via partnerships between  Commonwealth and state governments.    | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.67  | 
                        According to DEST’s Annual National Report of the Australian Vocational and Technical  Education System 2005, there is a national network of over 4 000  public and private national registered training providers. Over  1.6 million Australians—from a variety of career stages—participate in VET  each year.44 
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                        | 6.68  | 
                        The 2004‑08  Commonwealth State Agreement for Skilling Australia’s Workforce established  government funding and accountability arrangements for the system, which is  based upon industry‑defined competency standards, assessment guidelines,  qualifications and support materials. Addressing skill shortages, especially in  traditional trades and emerging industries and increasing participation and up‑skilling  of mature workers are among the priorities of the training system.45 
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                        | 6.69  | 
                        As outlined in the DEST Submission, there are a  wide range of government training and funding initiatives underway that address  (either as a whole or in part) the skills shortage in Australia and  career opportunities for those in the manufacturing industry at the school,  TAFE and industry level. These include Australian Technical Colleges, Industry  Skills Councils, group training schemes, Backing  Australia’s Ability, the National  Skills Shortages Strategy and February 2006 COAG Agenda.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.70  | 
                        Under the Realising  their Potential package, the 2007–08 Budget recently provided $343 million  to DEST over four years for tax‑exempt wage top‑ups of $1000 per annum for  first and second year apprentices in skills shortage trades and $206 million  over four years to provide first and second year apprentices with $500 vouchers  to reimburse course fees. The Government also announced that it would extend  FEE-HELP to full‑fee paying students in diploma and advanced diploma courses  that are accredited as VET qualifications and provide $59 million over  four years to Registered Training Organisations to partner with industry and  local employers to implement fast-track, competency‑based apprenticeships.  | 
                      
                      
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                        | 6.71  | 
                        Employees in the manufacturing sector are trained  in a variety of ways, including: on‑the‑job; on-the-job and via formal in‑house  training; and a mix of on‑the‑job, formal in-house-training and general trade  training at state or territory TAFE institutions.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.72  | 
                        Most Australian Apprenticeships are four years duration  and in the traditional realm cover areas such as electrical, automotive,  engineering and manufacturing. Completion of an apprenticeship or traineeship  provides the employee with a trade qualification which is recognised throughout  Australia.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.73  | 
                        There are currently approximately 400 000  apprentices in training in Australia.46 According to the National Centre for Vocational Education Research, in the year  ending 30 September 2006, commencements of apprenticeships and  traineeships increased by one per cent on the previous year;  completions increased by three per cent; and withdrawals increased by three per cent.47  
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                        | 6.74  | 
                        Group training schemes were initially introduced  for the building and construction trades where volatility in the industry makes  it more difficult for an apprentice to be maintained by one employer for the  life of their apprenticeship. This approach was later rolled out into other  trade environments including manufacturing trades.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.75  | 
                        There are in excess of 150 group training  organisations operating throughout Australia. Apprentices and trainees  are employed by a group training organisation which receives government funding  and payments from host employers.48 The group training provider ensures an apprentice undertakes a trade course and  is placed in a host environment conducive to learning the trade. In many cases  the apprentice will be placed with one host employer for the length of their  apprenticeship. Should a host be unable to support the apprentice’s work, or  where they have a narrow industry field, the group employer provides the  opportunity for the apprentice to complete their full apprenticeship with other  host employers. Such arrangements are most called for in small‑scale manufacturing  environments.  
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.76  | 
                        The importance of collaboration between TAFE and  group training providers was noted by a committee member at an inquiry hearing: 
                          I know the value of industry focused local solutions and local  collaborations of TAFE and group training companies, supported by industry...49 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.77  | 
                        State and territory TAFEs are the traditional  link between manufacturers and employee training schemes. However, the  relationship between TAFEs and employees is now in a state of flux—some  apprenticeship training may now be delivered entirely in the work place, with  involvement from TAFE, and tailored to meet the needs of employers.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.78  | 
                        During site visits, the committee heard of the  difficulties some apprentices have in accessing appropriate training at a  nearby TAFE—needing to travel long distances (from regional to metropolitan  areas), due in part to a lack of teaching resources in specific subject areas.50 
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                        | 6.79  | 
                        The traditional apprenticeship is also facing  the challenge of Generation Y career needs/wants. That is, to keep pace  with changing technology and to be more flexible in terms of commitment to a  particular job or workplace.  In light of  this, the four year apprenticeship period is too long, locking the worker into  a lower pay scale for a set period, and can also act as a deterrent for mature  (existing) workers to become trade skilled. The Australian Chamber of Commerce  and Industry noted: 
                          They [Generation Y] do not necessarily expect to remain in the one  occupation or with the one employer for extended periods of time.51 
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                        | 6.80  | 
                        A further challenge for education providers is  the high level of sophistication needed in terms of training equipment—often  beyond the funding constraints of TAFEs.    | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.81  | 
                        TAFE NSW has devised a practical solution to  this equipment/training issue, wherein a number of TAFE institutes have formed  working relationships with industry to provide in‑house training in  manufacturing workplaces. One example of this was the partnership formed with  precision manufacturing company Broens Pty Ltd. TAFE teachers utilise Broens’  advanced, costly machinery to tailor workplace‑specific training for its trade  course. These arrangements mean trainers are kept up‑to‑date with the latest  equipment and ensure that elementary trade skills, as well as job‑specific  skills are maintained.52 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.82  | 
                        TAFE NSW is successfully working with industry  in this way across a number of regional institutions. It is a model that could  be further developed in TAFE institutions nationally.  | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        The role of industry | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.83  | 
                        A common criticism from industry is that vocational  training systems are out of date, too slow and not tailored to the skills  required in the workplace. As a corollary of this, there is a reported  reluctance in some industry sectors to take on apprentices or lower‑skilled  workers, because industry may not realise the benefits quickly enough, or at  all—if employees change jobs. This has obvious implications for the skill levels  of an industry in need of skilled employees.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.84  | 
                        A recent article in the Australian detailed the perils of training and upskilling employees  with the example of SJ Cheesman, a small‑scale engineering parts  manufacturer in Port Pirie, South    Australia. The company employed six former abattoir  workers and trained them in health, safety, metal grinding and oxygen torches.  After six months, four workers left. Managing director, Mr Richter  noted: 
                          Other bastards have come along and  poached them.53 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.85  | 
                        Evidence presented to the inquiry suggested that  information about apprenticeships and the VET system can be so complex as to  discourage potential employers making use of these resources.54 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.86  | 
                        There was also a reported reluctance in industry  to train existing employees. Given the shortage of workers, downtime for  training was not seen as practicable, as Mr Manwaring  argued: 
                          Investment in training is just as important as investment in machinery  or new products. If you look at tax regimes, a 125 per cent tax deduction  for R&D is all well and good but if you are not investing in people,  R&D is not going to do anything.55 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.87  | 
                        Flexibility in terms of course schedules, and  components of courses (i.e. cherry-picking) was seen as the key to  attracting employers.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.88  | 
                        Several witnesses to the inquiry noted that  overcoming the skills shortage would require active participation and  commitment from industry, educators and individuals in ‘three‑way partnerships’—where  industry actively informs the subject matter of VET, to ensure the relevance of  the training.56 Mr Fillingham  from TAFE NSW noted: 
                          I think we need some way to encourage the manufacturing industry in  particular and industry in general to want to take on people and to engage in  training of their existing workforce as well as their new entrants.57 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.89 | 
                        Despite criticisms of the current apprenticeship  and trainee system survey research suggests that existing arrangements are  working for many employers. A 2005 National Centre for Vocational Education  Research report on employers’ (not exclusively in the manufacturing sector) use  of the VET system found that 57 per cent of surveyed employers’ had  had some engagement with the system in the previous twelve months. Of those: 
                         - 79 per cent  of employers with apprentices or trainees were satisfied;
                          and
 
                           - 80 per cent of employers using other nationally recognised training were satisfied.58
  
                         | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Schools and VET | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.90  | 
                        Beyond public relations campaigns about the  value of a manufacturing career, practical options and incentives are available  to interest and train school students in a vocation whilst they are still at  school. RMIT described the ‘taster’ programmes they conducted for Year 10  school students, to bring them on campus and demonstrate training they may want  to undertake.59 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.91  | 
                        The Australian Government’s Adopt a School Programme encourages local businesses to form mentor‑type  partnerships with schools in their area, providing advice on VET and  apprenticeships. On a site visit, the committee encountered the scheme  operating successfully with Inbye Mining Company in the Hunter Region  of NSW.    | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.92  | 
                        TAFE NSW is brokering partnerships between  industries and communities to facilitate creative training opportunities, such  as a recent successful ‘T3’ programme in Sydney  where Year 12 students spent half a day a week at TAFE, one day at a Toyota dealership and the  rest on their school studies. Forty nine of the 52 students enrolled  completed the programme and their Higher School Certificate.60 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.93  | 
                        According to the DEST, over 90 per cent  of Australian high schools have some form of vocational training available to  students, via VET in schools courses or Australian School‑based Apprenticeships.61 These arrangements allow students to complete the highest level of secondary  education whilst undertaking some vocational education. This may occur in  specialist trade schools; in block release with TAFE or entirely at TAFE. 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.94  | 
                        The federal government has recently formed 28 Australian  Technical Colleges as specific colleges to provide school based VET education.  These were designed to overcome skills shortages, particularly in regional  areas and have recently received $84 million over five years for an  additional three colleges in the 2007–08 Budget. With the first tranche of  colleges only recently opened, it is premature to make an assessment of their  impact at this stage.  | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Universities and manufacturing | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.95  | 
                        As noted above, the change in manufacturing  technology has lead to a high demand for technically skilled university  qualified employees.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.96  | 
                        This requires a culture shift in perceptions  about manufacturing as a career, such that university‑educated technicians  consider pursuing careers in professions that were once trade‑dominated.  According to the National Manufacturing Forum, in a perfect world: 
                          Young people [would] see manufacturing as an industry of many and varied  career opportunities, good pay and the opportunity to work in the global  economy.62 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.97  | 
                        It is  interesting to note that the manufacturing sector already has a relatively high  intensity of engineers and scientists.63 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.98  | 
                        A number  of witnesses to the inquiry backed the Ai Group suggestion that science and  engineering undergraduate degrees should be given HECS concessions (as is done  for education and nursing degrees) to support students’ entry into the  manufacturing industry. Science Industry Australia noted: 
                          Designating science and engineering as national priority areas, exempt  from HECS fee increases, in a similar way to nursing and education, would  assist in encouraging students to take up science and engineering at  university.64 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.99  | 
                        However,  its is not clear how effective this would be in switching students’ preferences  between degrees, given that HECS does not have to be paid until a certain level  of income is reached. It is also questionable on equity grounds as, unlike  nurses and teachers, science and engineering graduates are likely to go on to  earn high salaries. There is also a risk to the overall integrity of the HECS  scheme if various fields of study are successively given concessions.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.100  | 
                        Away from the traditional degree‑domains, dual‑sector  institutions, such as RMIT are providing industry skills ‘through a mix of  higher and vocational education’. The key to making such initiatives successful  again is flexibility—accommodating working students in night time courses and  facilitating accelerated courses, and industry relevance—working closely with  industry to develop the training and skills required for the workplace.65 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.101  | 
                        To be truly effective, educators, trainers and  industry need to think in the long‑term, beyond yearly enrolments, to pre‑empt industry  trends and thus student needs, rather than simply reacting to changes in the  workplace as they occur.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.102  | 
                        In a similar way, any panic about a ‘brain  drain’ of graduates needs to be viewed holistically. The focus should not be on  discouraging graduates from working overseas, but attracting them back with  their new skills and knowledge, as Dr   Wells of RMIT University  said: 
                          It is less a matter of a brain drain than a matter of a brain swirl that  we are looking at with a globally mobile workforce. We should be less anxious about  people moving offshore once they have completed a qualification to work and  more concerned with how we draw them back and how we draw talent from offshore  to work in Australia.66 
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.103  | 
                        Furthermore,  as the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Science and Innovation  noted in their June 2006 report Pathways  to Technological Innovation, statistical data for years to 2003–04 suggest  that ‘losses of scientist and engineers through emigration have been offset  through net gains through immigration’.67  
                         | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Conclusions  | 
                        
                      
                        | 6.104  | 
                        The committee notes the need to up‑skill  existing employees to address the skills gap created by changing technologies  and to enhance career pathways. This necessitates a focus on immobile workers,  who do not have opportunity beyond the job they are currently doing. This  includes those who are highly skilled but unqualified and those who have very  specific skill sets that are not easily transferable across industry.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.105  | 
                        The committee therefore endorses the development  of paraprofessional qualifications and the recognition of prior learning  strategy that reduce training time and give professional recognition to  technicians.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.106  | 
                        VET training is evolving away from the  traditional rigid four‑year TAFE‑based apprenticeship, to more flexible  arrangements with schools, and industry employers. This is a much‑needed  evolution and the committee notes that apprentices and employees alike have  expressed dissatisfaction with traditional models, which do not necessarily  give apprentices the practical skills and training they require for the  workplace.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.107  | 
                        The committee notes the importance of three‑way  training partnerships between individuals/schools, educators and industry. The  success stories it heard in evidence involved TAFE brokering training  partnerships with industry—to harness up‑to‑date equipment and to gain an  understanding of skills that trainees require for the workplace. In addition,  group training organisations should be mindful of exposing apprentices to  technologically advanced equipment by ensuring a good spread of host employers  are involved in the scheme. Training needs to be flexible—in terms of structure  and schedule, to attract and maintain students of all ages.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.108  | 
                        The committee reinforces that industry  commitment is a vital to the training of younger (and older workers). Training  and development must be seen by industry as a priority even if it is a longer‑term  investment and temporary drain on resources.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.109  | 
                        The demand for university‑qualified  manufacturing workers created discussion about how best to encourage  undergraduates into degrees that led to manufacturing careers. A number of  witnesses to the inquiry supported the Ai Group suggestion that science,  engineering and mathematics‑based degrees be granted HECS concessions. However,  the committee does not endorse the suggestion as it does not think that HECS is  a disincentive (or suitable incentive) to one type of degree over another and  could pose a risk to the integrity of the HECS system.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.110  | 
                        The committee encourages the moves by dual‑sector  institutions, such as RMIT, to provide a mix of university and vocational  education. This is in keeping with calls for flexible, tailored approaches to  educating prospective manufacturing workers.    | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.111  | 
                        Australia’s  ‘brain drain’ needs to be viewed in the long‑term, with strategies developed to  win expatriate graduates back to the Australian workforce. It also needs to be  viewed in the context of net gains through immigration.    | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.112  | 
                        The committee endorses the suite of existing  government training and VET initiatives that are addressing manufacturing  skills shortages and careers in a variety of contexts—such as the National Skills Shortages Strategy. However,  with so many different programmes at the Commonwealth and state level, and ad‑hoc  arrangements between trainers and employees in place, it is difficult to  ascertain an accurate overall picture. Further work in this area could focus on  comprehensive audits of programmes, skill requirements and areas of genuine need.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.113  | 
                        Recommendation 15The committee recommends that post  secondary vocational education providers continue to seek out opportunities to form  training partnerships with companies that own costly state‑of‑the‑art equipment—to  give apprentices access to the latest technology and maintain the skills of  TAFE trainers.  | 
                      
       
      
                      
                        
                          | 1  | 
                          The skills shortage has been recognised by  the Australian Government in a range of initiatives since the late 1990s—including  the national skills shortage strategy established in 1999. Back  | 
                        
                        
                          | 2  | 
                           Australian Industry Group and  PricewaterhouseCoopers, Survey of Australian  Manufacturing: March Quarter 2007,  Sydney,  p. 4. Back  | 
                        
                        
                          | 3  | 
                          Victorian Government, Submission no. 40, p. 12. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 4  | 
                          The Treasury, Economic Roundup: Autumn 2007, Canberra, 14 June 2007, p. 72. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 5  | 
                          Department of Education, Science and  Training (DEST), Submission no. 49,  p. 3.  Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 6  | 
                          DEST, Submission  no. 49, p. 13. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 7  | 
                          Australian Bureau of Statistics, Innovation in Australian Business, cat.  no. 8158.0, ABS, Canberra,  2007, p. 25. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 8  | 
                           Council of Australian Governments, Communiqué,  10 February 2006,  as viewed 15 May 2007,  <http://www.coag.org.au/meetings/100206/index.htm>. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 9  | 
                          Australian Industry Group, World Class Skills for World Class  Industries, May 2006. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 10  | 
                          Department of Workforce and Employment  Relations, Australian Jobs 2007, DEWR,  Canberra, June  2007, p. 15, viewed 27 June 2007, <http://www.workplace.gov.au/NR/rdonlyres/00DD2708-97DA-47AF-8A7A-15F12196C447/0/AustralianJobs2007Workplace.pdf>.  The report cited a projected overall decline in manufacturing employment of 33 600  jobs over the next five years. This projection, based on trends of the last 20  years, was subsequently reported in Adrian Rollins,  ‘Manufacturing work shrinks’, The Australian  Financial Review, 19   June 2007, p. 6. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 11  | 
                           Victorian Government, Submission No. 40, p. 13. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 12  | 
                          Mr B Manwaring, Bruck Textiles, Transcript, 8 February 2007, p. 14.  Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 13  | 
                          Mr P Laver, Australian Academy  of Technological Sciences and Engineering (AATSE), Transcript, 28 August 2006,  p. 48. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 14  | 
                          Department of Tourism and Industry, Review of the Government’s Manufacturing  Strategy – Competing in the Global Economy, the Manufacturing Strategy Two  Years On, as viewed 22 May 2007,  <http://www.dti.gov.uk/files/file18188.pdf>. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 15  | 
                          Victorian Government, Agenda for New Manufacturing 2003, p. 11, as viewed 22 May 2007, <http://www.business.vic.gov.au/busvicwr/_assets/main/lib60015/agendanewmanufacturing03.pdf>. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 16  | 
                          Mr B Manwaring, Bruck Textiles, Transcript, 8 February 2007, p. 14. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 17  | 
                          Australian Safety and Compensation  Commission, National OH&S Strategy  2002–2012, as viewed 25   May 2007, <  http://www.ascc.gov.au/NR/rdonlyres/E8D707CF-9E69-4C61-A063-F04519170EF7/0/NationalOHSStrategy200212.pdf>. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 18  | 
                          Australian Safety and Compensation  Commission, Information Sheet:  Manufacturing, p. 1, as viewed 25 May 2007, <  http://www.ascc.gov.au/NR/rdonlyres/8AE325C4-0C73-4317-A332-E3268ED22C2B/0/ASCCinfo_Manufacturing.pdf>.  Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 19  | 
                          Australian Safety and Compensation  Commission, A Review of the Potential  OH&S Implications of Nanotechnology, pp. 11-12, as viewed  25 May 2007,  <http://www.ascc.gov.au/NR/rdonlyres/AC17BA49-8BA1-43B8-BC08-219DE53781E6/0/ASCCReviewOHSImplicationsNanotechnology2006.pdf>. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 20  | 
                          DEST, National  Industry Skills Report, May 2006, p. 8. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 21 | 
                          National Manufacturing Summit, Skills for Our Manufacturing Future,  Background Paper, Exhibit no. 24, December  2005, p. 11. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 22 | 
                          M Blackman, the Age, ‘Education Failures Hold China Back,’ 28 February 2007. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 23 | 
                          Prof. R Tytler, Australian Education Review 51, Re-imagining Science Education: Engaging  students in science for Australia’s  future, 15 May 2007,  p. 67. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 24 | 
                          Mr P Laver, AATSE, Transcript, 28 August 2006,  p. 43. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 25 | 
                          Mr P Laver, AATSE, Transcript, 28 August 2006,  p. 43. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 26 | 
                          Prof. R   Tytler, Australian Education  Review 51, Re-imagining Science  Education: Engaging students in science for Australia’s future, 15 May 2007, p. 13. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 27 | 
                          Dr J Gonis, Science Industry Association (SIA), Transcript, 2 March 2007, p. 14. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 28 | 
                          SIA, Submission  no. 7, p. 8. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 29 | 
                          Department of Industry, Tourism and  Resources, Submission no. 31, p. 25. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 30 | 
                          Mr K Fillingham, TAFE NSW, Transcript, 14 November 2006, p. 12. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 31 | 
                          Dr J Wells, RMIT University, Transcript, 28 August 2006, p. 25. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 32 | 
                          This ‘top-heaviness’ is slightly more  pronounced than in the total workforce where 15 to 24 year‑olds  make up 18 per cent and 55 to 64 year‑olds make up  47 per cent of the total workforce: National Manufacturing Summit, Background  Paper: Skills for our manufacturing future, Exhibit  no. 24, December 2005, p. 5. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 33 | 
                          Mr B Manwaring, Bruck Textiles, Transcript, 8 February 2007, p. 13. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 34 | 
                          Dr J Wells, RMIT University, Transcript, 28 August 2006, p. 23. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 35 | 
                          National Manufacturing Summit, Background  Paper: Skills for our manufacturing future, December 2005, Exhibit no. 24, p. 10. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 36 | 
                          Mr N Apple, Australian Council of Trade Unions, Transcript 22 November 2006, p. 15. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 37 | 
                          The Joint Standing Committee on Migration  published a report Review of Skilled  Migration in 2004. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 38 | 
                          Department of Immigration and Citizenship, Overview of Skilled Migration to  Australia, as viewed 22 May 2007,  <http://www.immi.gov.au/media/fact-sheets/24overview_skilled.htm>. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 39 | 
                          Australian Chamber of Commerce and  Industry (ACCI), Submission no. 33,  p. 32. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 40 | 
                          Mr K Fillingham, TAFE NSW, Transcript, 14   November 2006, p. 12. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 41 | 
                          RMIT   University, Submission no. 5, p. 5. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 42 | 
                          DEST, Submission no. 49, p. 5. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 43 | 
                          DEST, Submission  no. 49, p. 6.  Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 44 | 
                          DEST, Annual National Report of the Australian  Vocational and Technical Education System, 2005, p. 12. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 45 | 
                          DEST, Annual  National Report of the Australian Vocational and Technical Education System,  2005, pp. 12‑13. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 46 | 
                          DEST, Australian  Apprentices, <http://www.australianapprentices. gov.au>, viewed 25 May 2007. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 47 | 
                          National Centre for Vocational Education  Research, Apprentices and trainees—  September quarter 2006, Summary, viewed 22 May 2007, <http://www.ncver.edu.au/statistics/aats/quarter/sept2006/highlights.html>. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 48 | 
                          Matched government funding under the Joint  Group Training programme is only available to group training organisations that  meet the National Standards for Group  Training Organisations. The scheme totals approximately $20 million per  year. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 49 | 
                          Ms S Grierson MP, Transcript, 29   August 2006, p. 5. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 50 | 
                          For example, toolmaking is now only  offered at one TAFE NSW campus. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 51 | 
                          ACCI, Submission  no. 33, p. 34. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 52 | 
                          Mr K Fillingham, TAFE NSW, Transcript, 14 November 2006,  pp. 4‑5. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 53 | 
                          A Trounson, ‘Manufacturers become Miners’, the Australian, 27 January 2007, p. 34. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 54 | 
                          ACCI, Submission  no. 33, p. 34. Back  | 
                        
                        
                          | 55 | 
                          Mr B Manwaring, Bruck Textiles, Pty Ltd, Transcript, 8 February 2007, p. 13. Back  | 
                        
                        
                          | 56 | 
                          Mr K Fillingham, TAFE NSW, Transcript, 14 November 2006,  p. 13. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 57 | 
                          Mr K Fillingham, TAFE NSW, Transcript, 14   November 2006, p. 13. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 58 | 
                          National Centre for Vocational Education  Research, Employers’ use and views of the  VET system: Summary 2005, as viewed 22 May 2007, <http://www.ncver.edu.au/statistics/surveys/seuv05/seuv05highlights.htm>. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 59 | 
                           Dr J Wells, RMIT University, Transcript, 28 August 2006, p. 21. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 60 | 
                          Mr K Fillingham, TAFE NSW, Transcript, 14   November 2006, pp. 8–9. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 61 | 
                          DEST, Submission  no. 49, p. 8. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 62 | 
                          National Manufacturing Forum, Report, Exhibit 22, October 2006, p. 39,  as viewed 16 May 2006, <http://www.business.nsw.gov.au/NR/rdonlyres/4E9FFF98-494A-44AD-BB8E-5D689ED6FD7C/0/NatManuf_forum_Final_report_200610.pdf>. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 63 | 
                          Productivity Commission, Trends in Australian Manufacturing, Canberra, August 2003, p. 79. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 64 | 
                          SIA, Submission  no. 7, p. 8. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 65 | 
                          RMIT   University, Submission no. 5, p. 5;  Dr J Wells, RMIT University, Transcript, 28 August 2006,  p. 27. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 66 | 
                          Dr J Wells, RMIT University, Transcript, 28 August 2006, p. 27. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 67 | 
                          House of Representatives Standing  Committee on Science and Innovation, Pathways  to Technical Innovation, June 2006, p. 78. Back |