The impact that the assessment of the current economic situation has on the number of training places being offered
A distinct connection can be seen between the number of training places an enterprise anticipates offering in 2009 and the respective company's current economic situation.
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Enterprises that are in a good economic situation exhibit two attributes in particular: Firstly, a large share of such companies (55%) want to take on the same number as or more trainees than in the previous year. Secondly, the vast majority of these firms is in a position to provide concrete information on their plans for the coming training year.
In contrast, firms that cited their medium-term economic outlook were noticeably more reserved about quantifying their plans to take on trainees. One out of every four enterprises could not make a conclusive statement. On balance, the majority of firms plans to offer fewer training places in autumn 2009 constitute the majority.
Nearly half of the enterprises that find themselves in a bad economic situation plan to cut back on the number of training places they offer. One out of every five said that they had not yet decided on the number of places they would be offering in the coming training year.
Many enterprises are still uncertain about the effects that the financial / economic crisis will have. Accordingly, their plans for the coming training year are marked by uncertainty. Their efforts to maintain the number of training places they offer at a high level and not allow this number to be affected by passing difficulties in their business situation are quite evident. However, it cannot be ruled out that the economic crisis might worsen and many enterprises have not yet felt its full effect. For this reason, the prediction that BIBB makes here constitutes only an interim finding and is subject to the economy not deteriorating any further than could be foreseen to date.
The projected gap - a shortfall of some 18,000 training places that would be needed in 2009 to replicate the previous year's training place situation - is small enough that it could be closed with the help of existing programmes. In the survey, many enterprises indicated their efforts to maintain the number of in-house vocational training places they provide. Chambers, associations and employment agencies are called upon to conduct suitable information and publicity campaigns to foster the creation of additional in-company vocational training places. Existing support instruments (such as the training bonus for unplaced applicants from previous years) should be put to greater use. The civil service sector (federal government, state governments, municipal governments) is called upon to provide training places in order to stabilize the situation on the training place market. However, it will be important not only to convince enterprises to create new in-company training places. In light of the current economic crisis, additional action will be needed as a result of the growing number of 'bankruptcy apprentices' who have lost or will lose their training place because the company providing their in-house vocational training has gone bankrupt.