By 2030, the programme targets providing vocational training, retraining and skills upgrading for approximately 1.5 million rural workers annually. The employment rate after training is expected to exceed 85%.
At a woodworking facility in the former Vinh Phuc province (now Phu Tho). Photo: VNA
Deputy Prime Minister Le Thanh Long has signed a decision approving a programme on comprehensive reform and improvement of vocational training quality for rural workers by 2030.
The programme will be implemented nationwide, with priority given to especially disadvantaged coastal and island communes, ethnic minority and mountainous areas, and communes building new-style rural areas and advanced new-style rural models.
The aim is to comprehensively reform and enhance the quality and effectiveness of the training, contributing to labour and economic restructuring, job creation, increased incomes, and narrowing the gap in the proportion of trained workers between rural and urban areas.
The programme focuses on training high-quality human resources to serve advanced and modern agricultural production, while supporting the transition of part of the rural workforce into industry and services, in line with agricultural and rural industrialisation and modernisation, as well as international integration. It is also set to link rural human resource training with the development of modern, prosperous, culturally distinctive and sustainable new-style rural areas, associated with urbanisation and climate change adaptation. The training offered must be substantive, in-depth, effective and sustainable.
By 2030, the programme targets providing vocational training, retraining and skills upgrading for approximately 1.5 million rural workers annually. The employment rate after training is expected to exceed 85%.
To strengthen conditions for vocational training, the programme will develop and upgrade training curricula, textbooks and learning materials in line with labour market demands and emerging occupations shaped by the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
It will also prioritise training courses in industrial, service and agricultural sectors, as well as rural trades aligned with regional socio-economic development needs.
Other priorities are the digitisation of training programmes, databases and manuals, as well as the pilot establishment of remote training stations in disadvantaged and ethnic minority areas./.