By 2020, employment in the European Union (EU) is forecast to be back to its 2008 pre-crisis levels but the overall picture masks differences between countries on the rate of job growth and the types of jobs that will be available.

Cedefop – an EU agency that analyses training policies and the labour market – forecasts that employment, for example, in Italy, the Netherlands and Slovakia, should be back to pre-crisis levels by 2020.

But in other countries such as the Czech Republic, Greece, Spain and Portugal, employment is expected to still be below pre-crisis levels by 2025. This contrasts with other member states, including Germany, France, Austria, Sweden and the UK, where there are already more jobs than before the crisis began in 2008.

Cedefop also forecasts that between now and 2025 business and other services will drive employment growth in most countries. But in Spain, Cyprus, Poland and Romania, for example, most job growth is forecast for the distribution and transport sector. Despite manufacturing jobs declining in the EU overall, small increases are foreseen for Ireland, Cyprus, Poland, Latvia, Slovakia and Finland.

Jobs on offer will also vary considerably across countries up to 2025. Cedefop predicts that around a third of job opportunities in Denmark and Poland will be for high-level professional jobs in science, engineering, healthcare, business and education.

In Malta and Austria, around a fifth of job opportunities are forecast to be for service and sales workers

In Malta and Austria, around a fifth of job opportunities are forecast to be for service and sales workers, while in Romania almost one vacancy in two will be for skilled agriculture and fisheries workers.

Employers and jobs are also expected to be more demanding, requiring more high-level qualifications. In several countries including Belgium, Luxembourg, Sweden, Slovenia and Slovakia at least half of all job opportunities up to 2025 are forecast to require high-level qualifications. But Cedefop foresees significant numbers of jobs requiring medium-level qualifications and most people in the EU will continue to be employed at this level.

Although a little smaller and older, the EU’s workforce will be better qualified.

All member states should reach, or be very close to, the EU’s benchmark of 40 per cent of 30 to 34-year-olds having university-level qualifications by 2020.

Numbers of people with no qualifications are also forecast to fall.

Some 18 member states have already reached the EU’s target of reducing the number of young people leaving the education and training system with low-level qualifications to below 10 per cent by 2020.

Vocational education and training systems across countries and sectors are already being re­formed, but will need to adapt further to seize the opportunities job growth may bring.

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