This document is an excerpt from the EUR-Lex website
Success of Lisbon strategy hinges on urgent reforms
Success of Lisbon strategy hinges on urgent reforms
Success of Lisbon strategy hinges on urgent reforms
This summary has been archived and will not be updated, because the summarised document is no longer in force or does not reflect the current situation.
Success of Lisbon strategy hinges on urgent reforms
Despite the efforts being made in all European countries to adapt education and training systems to the knowledge-based society and economy, the reforms undertaken are not up to the challenges and their current pace will not enable the Union to attain the objectives set. This Communication reviews the situation and proposes urgent measures to be taken to speed up the Union's transition to a knowledge-based economy and society, as provided for in the Lisbon strategy.
ACT
Communication from the Commission - "Education & Training 2010": The success of the Lisbon Strategy hinges on urgent reforms (Draft joint interim report on the implementation of the detailed work programme on the follow-up of the objectives of education and training systems in Europe) [COM (2003) 685 final - Not published in the Official Journal].
3) SUMMARY
At the Lisbon European Council held in March 2000, the Heads of State and Government set the Union a major strategic goal for 2010: "to become the most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based economy in the world, capable of sustainable economic growth with more and better jobs and greater social cohesion". In March 2001, the European Council adopted three strategic goals (and 13 associated concrete objectives) to be attained by 2010: education and training systems should be organised around quality, access and openness to the world. A year later, it approved a detailed work programme for the attainment of these goals
The five European benchmarks adopted by the Education Council in May 2003 will for the most part be difficult to achieve by 2010. For example, the level of education in Europe remains inadequate (only 75% of young people aged 22 have completed some form of upper secondary level education, against a target of 85% by 2010), the level of participation in lifelong learning continues to be low (fewer than 10% of adults participate in further learning, the target being to reach 12.5% by 2010), and both failure at school (one in five pupils drops out of school, the objective being to reduce this rate by half) and social exclusion remain too high in the face of a worrying shortage of teachers (by 2015, mainly because of the retirement of existing teachers, over a million teachers will have to be recruited).
In addition, there are no signs of any substantial increase in overall investment (be it public or private) in human resources. During the period 1995-2000, public-sector investment dwindled in most Member States and is now 4.9 % of GDP in the EU. The Union is suffering in particular from under-investment by the private sector in higher education and continuing training. In comparison to the Union, private-sector investment is five times higher in the United States (2.2% of GDP compared with 0.4% in the EU) and three times higher in Japan (1.2%). In addition, the expenditure per student in the United States is higher than that of almost all EU countries at all levels of the education system. The greatest difference is in higher education: the United States spends between two and five times more per student than the EU countries.
These continuing weaknesses are all the more worrying as the effects of investment and reforms on the systems are felt only in the medium and even long term, and as the date of 2010 is getting closer and closer. A wake-up call is therefore essential at all levels if there is still to be a chance of achieving the Lisbon objectives. To this end, the Commission feels it is essential to act simultaneously, and right away, on four priority areas:
In relation to the first area, the Commission asks that Member States identify their weak points and increase investment accordingly. It asks in particular:
With regard to the second area, the Commission calls on Member States to define truly coherent and comprehensive lifelong learning strategies, and in particular to:
In relation to the third area, the Commission is in favour of rapidly introducing a European reference framework for qualifications in higher education and vocational training, and calls on Member States to:
The Commission highlights the essential role of education and training in the fields of employment, social cohesion and growth, and wants the Lisbon strategy's "Education & Training 2010" initiative to become a more effective tool for formulating and following up national and Community policies.
Given that time is running out for taking effective action before 2010, the Commission proposes that all of these measures be taken quickly, and feels it is essential to achieve a more structured and more systematic follow-up to progress made. It proposes that Member States submit to it, each year as from 2004, a consolidated report on all the action they take on education and training which can contribute to the Lisbon strategy.
RELATED ACTS
"Education and Training 2010" The success of the Lisbon Strategy hinges on urgent reforms (Joint interim report of the Council and the Commission on the implementation of the detailed work programme on the follow-up of the objectives of education and training systems in Europe) [Official Journal C 104 of 30.04.2004].
This joint Council and Commission document is a response to the Barcelona European Council's request for a report in March 2004 on the implementation of the work programme on the objectives of education and training systems. It reviews the progress made to date, describes the challenges to be met and proposes measures to be taken in order to achieve the objectives. This joint report also looks at the implementation of the Recommendation and the action plan on mobility, the Education Council's Resolution on lifelong learning and the Copenhagen Ministerial Declaration on enhanced European cooperation in education and vocational training. It is also informed by the following up of a number of Commission communications, particularly those relating to the urgent need to invest more in human resources and to do so more efficiently, the role of universities in the knowledge-based Europe, the need to upgrade the profession of researcher in Europe, and the comparison of performance in education across Europe with the rest of the world.
Despite the progress achieved (such as the implementation of the Erasmus Mundus and eLearning programmes), the report emphasises that the European Union must catch up with its main competitors (the United States and Japan) in terms of investment and develop comprehensive strategies to make lifelong learning a reality.
For further information, please visit the Education DG's website on the Lisbon strategy, " Education & Training 2010 ".
Last updated: 03.05.2007