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Making industrial policy work: a case study on the European Battery Alliance Academy

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McCaffrey, Conor ; Poitiers, Niclas Frederic

Bruegel, Brussels

Bruegel - Brussels

2024

23 p.

industrial policy ; labour market ; labour shortage ; skilled worker ; sustainable development

EU countries

Working Paper

01/2024

Labour market

https://www.bruegel.org/sites/default/files/2024-01/WP%2001%202024_0.pdf

English

Bibliogr.

"The transition from cars powered by the internal combustion engine to vehicles powered by electric batteries implies a fundamental shift in the types of skills required by the automotive industry. However, the industry faces significant problems in finding suitable workers. Surveys show that the lack of skilled labour is seen by firms as a problem of similar magnitude to high energy costs. Against the background a general skills shortage in the European Union, the shortage of skilled labour represents a major impediment to the development of a European battery industry.

The European Battery Alliance Academy is the main component of the EU's strategy for tackling this problem. It develops training courses and materials to assist local training providers, and serves as a blueprint for skills policies in other industries. However, given the scale of the challenge, it represents more a symbolic than a substantive answer to the challenge.

More should be done. The limited powers of the EU in labour market policies hold up a union-wide solution. In the short term, the training programmes developed by the European Battery Alliance Academy* could more explicitly target demographics that are underserved by private training providers. In the medium term, the EU should rethink its labour market competences in order to develop a social pillar to underpin the European green transition."

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