New Program Aims to Bring Ethiopian Immigrants to Israel into Tech Economy

Published: 
January 22, 2016

Source: Times of Israel

 

The immigration of Ethiopian Jews to Israel has been a mixed success story: on the one hand, statistics show that the majority of members of the community are working; on the other hand, the jobs they are doing are not the high-quality ones hoped for by all Israelis.

To correct that, the government announced this week that it would spend NIS 55 million ($14 million) on programs to improve the work status of Ethiopian immigrants. Job training, academic programs, and grants to employers for hiring workers of Ethiopian descent are all part of the new effort initiated by the government Ministerial Committee on the Integration of Israeli Citizens of Ethiopian Descent into Israeli Society.

The project is to be carried out over the next four years, with the aim of upgrading the skills of at least 3,600 Ethiopian-descent youths and adults, enabling them to access the high-quality jobs in Israel’s high-tech economy.

A study released last June by the Taub Center for Social Policy Studies in Israel — based on numbers supplied by the Central Bureau of Statistics — showed that in both employment and education, Israelis of Ethiopian descent have made great progress over the past two decades. By 2011, 72% of Ethiopian Israelis at prime working ages (25-54) were employed, only slightly lower than the 79% employment rate of the non-Ethiopian Jewish population. In addition, more of them were working full-time.

Nevertheless, there were still significant gaps between Ethiopian-background Israelis and others. About 21% of Ethiopian Israelis educated in Israel are to be found in the top levels of the labor market, as compared to about 40% among the rest of the Jewish population, and about 60% are employed in occupations for low-skilled or unskilled workers, compared to 41% among the rest of the Jewish population (among first-generation immigrants, both those metrics were far lower).

It is those gaps that the new program seeks to close. The Economy Ministry has been working on this program for the past 18 months — consulting with academics, organizational representatives, government officials, representatives of local authorities, regional representatives and community activists — and this past week, the action plan was officially unveiled.

Under the new arrangement, schools will establish special advanced placement courses for high school students of Ethiopian background, in order to upgrade their study skills and habits, as well as provide assistance in helping them to pass the matriculation exams required to get into college. At the university level, counselors will work with students to further upgrade their skills, and direct them to study programs that will help them actualize career goals.

Meanwhile, workers already in the job market will be able to avail themselves of training programs to upgrade their skills, with the aim of enabling them to join university degree programs (such as those offered by the Open University) to enable them to qualify for better jobs. The goal will be to get at least 3,600 members of the community of about 125,000 into “high quality” jobs in the tech economy, the Ministry said.

Read more at the Times of Israel.

Updated: Jan. 28, 2016
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