Scotland’s Green Jobs Conundrum : How to Better Measure the Employment Impact of a Low Carbon Future
Allan, Grant and McGregor, Peter and Swales, Kim (2014) Scotland’s Green Jobs Conundrum : How to Better Measure the Employment Impact of a Low Carbon Future. University of Strathclyde.
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Abstract
The political ambition to turn Scotland into a low carbon economy, powered by renewable energy technologies, is driven, in part, by the belief that such a transformation will reindustrialise the country and generate tens of thousands of skilled jobs. This paper reviews Scottish energy strategy since 1999 and notes the stronger policy link in recent years between investment in low carbon and renewable energy and related employment growth. The evolution of this strategy has culminated in explicit, ambitious targets for green jobs created. However, defining low carbon and renewable employment is complex. Three recent estimates of such employment in Scotland came to quite disparate conclusions. There is an underlying problem: the current lack of appropriate disaggregation of such employment categories in the economic accounts. Were such disaggregation available, it would provide robust and reproducible measures of employment in defined activities. It would also identify the causal drivers of measured (current) employment and where these drivers lie on “temporary-long term” or “domestic-global” axes. Economic accounts, disaggregated in this way, would help demonstrate whether specific policy interventions are delivering the jobs forecast. In our view, greater conceptual clarity and a more significant allocation of resources need to be devoted to the measurement of activity and employment in low carbon and renewable activities in Scotland to allow any meaningful evaluation of strategy in this area.
ORCID iDs
Allan, Grant ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1404-2768, McGregor, Peter ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1221-7963 and Swales, Kim;-
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Item type: Report ID code: 53568 Dates: DateEventDecember 2014PublishedSubjects: Social Sciences > Economic Theory Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > International Public Policy Institute (IPPI)
Strathclyde Business School > EconomicsDepositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 01 Jul 2015 09:41 Last modified: 17 Dec 2024 01:35 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/53568