Final report from Enterprise and Skills Review launched

Woman with hard hat speaking to man at desk
Don Morrison

Cabinet Secretary for the Economy, Jobs and Fair Work Keith Brown has launched the final report from the Enterprise and Skills Review.

The report includes measures to support business, ensure young people have access to the right skills, and create growth across the Scottish economy. These measures include improved access to innovation, enterprise and international support and streamlined skills provision.

A new enterprise agency will be created to meet the economic needs of communities in the South of Scotland.

Mr Brown said:

"This report shows how we can transform the performance of our economy and enable more businesses to deliver strong, vibrant and inclusive growth at scale.

"From better co-ordination of our international activity to ensuring young people are equipped with the skills they need to succeed, this review has delivered a package of reforms that will drive change across the country.

"We have recognised the importance of providing dedicated support to the South of Scotland in the same way we currently do for the Highlands and Islands. A new agency will be established to meet the distinctive economic needs of communities in the South of Scotland.

"We are putting a greater urgency behind our innovation action plan and joining up the efforts of our skills agencies to help learners and businesses get the training they need. Businesses will benefit from streamlined innovation support through a new digital access point, building on the recent success that has seen Scotland move into the top group of EU nations as regards innovation performance.

"The fundamentals of Scotland’s economy are strong and – as this report confirms – we are doing all that we can to build upon these further."

The final report from the Enterprise and Skills Review confirms significant progress, including:

  • A new enterprise agency to boost growth in the South of Scotland
  • A more coherent, collaborative and streamlined system of business support, including development of a single digital access point
  • Piloting a £500k College Innovation Fund to support Scotland’s colleges to work with businesses on innovation activity
  • A new, five-stage skills planning model developed jointly by the skills agencies
  • Strengthened engagement with regional partnerships, including closer work with the private sector
  • A review of the learner journey for 15-24 year olds to ensure it provides the best path to success
  • Boosting trade and investment in Scotland by better co-ordinating international activity
  • A Strategic Board to be set up in autumn 2017, guiding overall direction of the enterprise and skills agencies
  • A cross-agency analytical unit set up to drive performance and ensure business support decisions are based on the best data available
  • An Implementation Board, chaired by Professor Lorne Crerar, to take forward this work immediately

Read the final report from the Enterprise and Skills Review