25/10/2016 - Reform of our enterprise and skills agencies
can help put Scotland among the top performing OECD nations, Economy Secretary
Keith Brown said today.
The report from the first phase of the review of enterprise
and skills services has outlined a raft of reforms including:
- Creating
a new Scotland-wide statutory board to co-ordinate the activities of
Scottish Enterprise and Highlands and Islands Enterprise, including
Scottish Development International, Skills Development Scotland and the
Scottish Funding Council.
- Protecting
services in the Highlands and Islands and creating a new service for the
south of Scotland
- Accelerating
the delivery of the Trade and Investment Strategy and, through SDI,
co-ordinating international activity across the public and academic
sectors to ensure maximum benefit.
- Improving
the data and evaluation functions to ensure the new board can provide the
best advice across all agencies.
- Offering
more support to businesses on innovation, productivity, digital and
exporting.
- aligning
the functions of our learning and skills agencies to deliver the joined-up
support that our young people, colleges, universities and businesses need
to increase sustainable economic growth.
Mr Brown said:
“We are proud of our enterprise and skills agencies, and in
recent years their efforts have contributed to real improvements in our
economic performance.
“But we know that further improvement is required - our
ambition is for Scotland to rank among the top performing OECD nations for
productivity, equality, sustainability and wellbeing.
“Since the review was announced, the EU Referendum result
has made the economic context more challenging. It requires that we renew our
focus and prioritise our efforts
“This review has focused on how we can build on existing
strengths and successes to further improve the enterprise and skills support
system in Scotland. This will ensure a system in which all of our agencies work
both hand in glove with each other and collaboratively with our business,
academic and civic partners to optimise economic impact across the whole of
Scotland.”
The full report and recommendations can be accessed here:
Source: Scottish Government
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