A key
dynamic that could put a brake on France’s growth is difficulties in recruiting
Sat, Oct 20, 2018, 04:00
Nantes,
France. The skills shortage is particularly acute in digital, according to
Matthieu Thibault, president of DSMI, an IT infrastructure company based near
Nantes and employs about 70 people. Photograph: iStock
In a
factory near the town of Cholet, some 50km from Nantes in the west of France, large blocks of clay are
being shaped, dried out and finally fired in a kiln at 1,000 degrees
centigrade. These terracotta building blocks are then shipped off to construction
companies.
The
factory’s owner, Bouyer Leroux, is the leading French
manufacturer of terracotta building materials, and stands to benefit from the
country’s tentative economic revival. However, there is one key dynamic that
could put a brake on growth, despite a recovering economy and France’s
reform-minded government: difficulties in recruiting.
“The
current situation for hiring both skilled and unskilled workers is difficult
because there’s an imbalance between supply and demand,” said Bouyer
Leroux’s chief executive Roland Besnard, wearing a hard hat and a
high visibility vest over his navy blue suit.
Even in
France, where unemployment is stuck at more than 9 per cent and among the
highest in Europe, an increasing number of
companies are complaining about the lack of skilled workers, according to
Inséé, the country’s national statistical institute. This mismatch between
companies’ needs and the skills available – a phenomenon in large parts of the euro
zone – could crimp the region’s nascent economic recovery.
This summer
Bouyer Leroux, which employs 1,400 people in France and is increasing revenues
at a rate of 10 per cent a year, had to increase its delivery time because of a
dearth of maintenance workers for its production sites. Mr Besnard said:
“Maintenance activities are not skewed to one industry so there is a
competition for maintenance workers between industries because of the slight
recovery.”
We have a
system of learning that does not provide the skills that are needed
Mr Besnard
echoes the sentiments expressed by many chief executives who are struggling to
hire skilled and unskilled workers in France when he said “the main concern is
the university system, the school system and a welfare system that’s too
generous”
It is a
concern that is shared by policymakers. France’s finance minister, Bruno Le Maire, told a group of
journalists last month that the question of skills is “the most important
economic issue in France” today. He said: “We have a system of learning that
does not provide the skills that are needed. And suddenly, you have falling
unemployment.”
Level of qualification
According
to a report in July by the Bpifrance public investment
bank, nine out of 10 mid-sized companies are facing recruitment difficulties.
The main reason that they put forward for this is an inadequate level of
qualification of the employee.
“There is a
paradoxical situation in the French labour market where on the one hand there
is high unemployment but on the other hand, a large number of mid-sized
companies say that their main difficult is hiring,” said Nicolas Bouzou, head of Asterès, an
economic research centre.
He said
this was largely because of three reasons: a lack of trained people for the
jobs that are open, a generous welfare system for unemployed people in France
that does not always motivate them to look for a job and a lack of adequate
housing where many of the jobs are located.
Cholet,
which owes the rise of its prosperity to the settlement of weavers in the 17th
century, is situated in the thriving Pays de la Loire region. Its
unemployment rate of 5.7 per cent in the second quarter is far below the
national level of 9.1 per cent and among the lowest in the country, thanks to
its strong position in industries ranging from services to construction to
agri-food.
The skills
shortage is particularly acute in digital, according to employers such as Matthieu Thibault, who is president of DSMI,
an IT infrastructure company that is based near Nantes and employs about 70
people. “The challenge for my business is to keep growing,” he said. “The main
difficulty is the recruitment and retention of qualified people in our IT
field.”
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