The persistent lack of success of attempts to create small
and medium sized enterprises in the tertiary and secondary sectors
underscored the need to devise and implement mechanisms capable
of offering entrepreneurs the necessary knowledge and experience
to prevail in their undertakings. The idea of firms incubators
was considered, consisting of an adequate physical infrastructure
and equipment, providing candidates with real-life contact with
the main aspects of their business. Incubators have subsequently
evolved focusing specially on the technological basis of affairs.
If this is important for commerce and industry,
it is obviously vital for the livestock raising and agribusiness
sectors, where technology has to be in keeping with the economic,
social and environmental conditions of rural communities. Agricultural
industrial incubators are therefore essential. They are
usually Comprehensive Occupational Schools offering rural producers
and workers the sufficient and necessary knowledge, experiences,
instruments and means to turn them into agribusiness entrepreneurs,
and play a leading role in the agricultural productive chains.
The strategy of these incubators rests upon the institutional
agreements required to bring together complex and broad-based
activities like those relevant to the development of agriculture
and agribusiness.
It is in essence an educational process that
relies on the modern concept of instruction within a given context
of occupational competencies (skills), contributing specifically
to improve peoples living standards. It is an education
adapted to each regional situation, and its agricultural inclinations
or aptitudes.
It is based on competencies so as to offer
persons full knowledge and abilities for the performance of
a job. It is occupational in nature because it aims at further
education in tasks that were already carried out by individuals
every day, and will continue to be so.
Finally, it is a process that will improve
peoples living standards because besides imparting the
productive skills distinctive of vocational training
which add economic value incubators also provide instruction
in the Social Promotion area, such as preventive medicine, alternative
food, domestic hygiene, etc. that help to ameliorate peoples
living conditions at a personal, home and community level.
This all-embracing educational package is delivered
through occupational and programme modules that, with suitable
support and activation, provide the necessary sequence to transform
mere producers and sellers of commodities into agribusiness
entrepreneurs.
The process begins with a register of persons
that meet the requirements of the incubator proposal. This identifies
potential candidates as well as procedural dynamics. Selection
criteria for participation in the programme are thus defined:
participants should be rural produces or workers; processors,
middlemen or dealers in commodities or other products of the
agricultural sector.
Selected candidates go through the occupational
module that gives them further training until they can perform
tasks to full satisfaction. This constitutes the very essence
of the SENAR directive of "Learning by doing". Successful
candidates go into the subsequent module where they are taught
the know-how and techniques to carry out an economic analysis
of their business.
If participants are interested and their projects
are viable, they enter a third stage dealing with marketing
and management techniques. In this manner, after production
methods have been refined, economic viability checked out, market
goals identified and management styles outlined. The final project
is prepared and implemented with direct participation of the
entrepreneurs themselves.
The Incubation Process is therefore based on
four modules, namely, Occupation, Economic Analysis, Marketing/Management
and Technical Project. By Occupation we mean an economic activity
comprising tasks that lead to the completion of a product or
service of commercial value. Economic Analysis consists of techniques
enabling incubator candidates to decide whether the business
they propose is viable or not. Market and Management include
the knowledge and experience necessary for potential entrepreneurs
to identify their market qualitatively and quantitatively, and
to adopt a management scheme. The last module is the joint preparation
of a Technical Project, with all side effects and implications,
including financial aspects.
As a guarantee of funding support, the Brazil
and Nordeste Banks have specialised representatives on the Managing
Committees of Incubators. All along the incubation process,
participants are encouraged to become associated with each other,
and are made aware of the fundamental importance of scale economies.
Also worth noting is that all incubator groups have to sell
their products in the market in accordance with their respective
Economic Analysis; they should only develop their Technical
Project after the viability of the undertaking has been checked
out.
The agribusiness incubator effort is gradual
and staggered, insofar as each phase is a result in itself,
in which participants are certified if they are successful.
That certification improves their chances in the labour market
as it bears witness to their abilities.
It is also important to reconcile the incubation
period with he need of participants to continue producing and
working in their normal activities, which implies negotiating
training days and hours carefully and is an ideal example of
participative education. The limits are that the total training
load of some 228 hours must be delivered in a years time.
Each Incubator is established as a non profit
Civil Society, run by a Managing Committee made up by representatives
of the institutions directly involved, which is responsible
even for the initial selection of candidates and their gradual
culling.
The experience of Agribusiness Incubators has
shown that there are great and interesting opportunities for
self-managed small and middle-sized agricultural enterprises
in the area of Bahía. Many results evidence added economic value
to the rural raw materials. Examples are the manufacture of
preserves, pickled vegetables, jam, sausages and dairy products
that add 10 to 12 times the value of original commodities. Products
are placed in principle in the local market.
Apart from such important economic and social
results, agribusiness incubators are also of strategic value
as they support small and medium sized enterprises and encourage
the participation of rural producers and workers in the in the
productive chain. This endogenous movement has far-reaching
effects, insofar as it promotes the overall modernisation of
primary production, industrialisation and marketing, with a
permanent impact on the development of rural areas.
The INACAP, in Chile, has a series of
technological centres where training services are provided to
workers, technicians and professionals, as well as technological
services of different kinds to firms and other bodies related
to production, both of goods and of services. Among the INACAP
technological centres, the International Telecommunications
Training Centre (CINCATEL) stands out. Training courses designed
and executed by this Centre are included in a wide variety of
specialisations which are being implemented in the telecommunications
field, based on market demand and on the feasibility of having
the human, material and technological resources necessary to
offer a training service which fulfills the demands of its clients.
CINCATEL has laboratories for Digital Conmutation, PCM Transmission,
Fiber Optic Transmission, Digital Microwaves, External Fiber
Optics Plant, Computer Science and Internet, and Communications.
It possesses both the infrastructure and the human resources
needed to provide advisory and engineering services both to
the private and the government sectors.
As examples of trade associations and technological
institutes that carry out activities which converge with those
performed by training institutions, we can mention, inter
alia:
The Chilean Chamber of Construction (CCC),
a body which, together with its normal functions as an employers
association, has a Technological Development Corporation which
provides services of: technological dissemination, through
publications, encounters and seminars, and establishing relations
with research and technological development centres in other
countries; transfer of technology, through technological
opportunity detection, co-ordination of business based on technology,
advisory services for obtaining funds for technological innovation
via contests, and technology transfer cycles; coordination
of technological interest groups, for drafting technical
and informative documents, regulatory documents, stimulating
related research and managing technology transfer projects;
promotion of technological studies, technical studies,
sectoral analyses and feasibility studies. This action on the
part of the CCC in the technological field is supplemented by
the development of an initiative aimed at establishing competency
profiles as required in the Chilean construction industry, as
a way of guiding both firms in their screening, training and
promotion of human resources policies, and the education sector
and training system in the curricula they offer.
The SENA, of Colombia, has had, in its
more than forty years of age, an increasing relationship with
productive technological development. From the standpoint of
this institution, its main function, to provide complete vocational
training for the countrys workers, can be defined as a
transfer of technology in a training environment, to be applied
to the productive processes of firms of all sizes and technological
complexities.
Among the specific fields of endeavour of the
SENA the focus of which is explicitly the support of technological
development, the following services can be singled out: support
to sectoral agreements regarding competitiveness; applied research
in association with other bodies; and special co-operation agreements.
These activities are carried out mainly by 21 training and technological
services centres which have comparative advantages to further
technological development activities, in which a significant
part of the resources of the bodys regular budget is invested.
These centres possess an infrastructure in equipment and plant
which can be used in strategic alliances with firms and technological
development and productivity centres to promote activities in
the framework of innovation and technological development.
At present that responsibility has been increased
by the assignment of a significant part of its parafiscal income
to productive technological development projects, in accordance
with the provisions of Law 344 of 1996. By applying these resources
the following is sought:
To increase the competitiveness of productive sectors with
the aim of promoting exports, improving innovative capacities
and raising the level of learning of employers and workers,
as support for the basic strategies of employment generation
and upgrading the quality of life of the Colombian population.
To provide vocational training in the country, to respond
to the needs of the productive sector, in such manner that
it be flexible, of good quality and relevant.
To modernise SENA vocational training centre management
systems.
To initiate the dovetailing of the National Vocational Training
System with the National Innovation System, establishing common
approaches and strategies which enable the quality of technical
and vocational education to be raised, technological innovation
in productive sectors to be furthered and the creation of
a new institutional culture for long term competitiveness
in Colombia.
In a general way, Colombia has sought to structure
its efforts regarding science and technology in a process beginning
with the enactment of Law 29, of 1990, which provides for the
development of scientific research and technological development
and grants special powers, inter alia, tomodify
the statutes of official bodies with science and technology
functions, including those of changing their appointments and
linkages and creating the bodies needed. The Law was broadened
and specified in 1996 by three decrees: one establishing rules
governing association for scientific and technological activities,
research projects and technology creation; another creating
the National Science and Technology Council and reorganising
the Colombian Institute for Science and Technology Development
(COLCIENCIAS); finally, a decree which regulates the specific
modalities of contracts for promoting scientific and technological
activities.
This legal framework has provided an important
base for reinforcing activities related to technological research
and development by decentralised agencies such as the SENA,
as well as universities and other institutes involved in the
subject. In this context, the role assigned to vocational training,
and concretely to the SENA, in competitiveness policy is very
important, not only as a provider of training services, but
also of funds for technological development projects. Together,
SENA and COLCIENCIAS constitute the National Technological Development
Projects Committee, the purposes of which are, inter alia:
to propose specific actions for dovetailing the National Innovation
System with the Vocational Training System, according to the
general policy and guidelines established by the CONPES and
the National Science and Technology Council; and to analyse
the projects and the concepts of the evaluators and experts
and decide on the feasibility of the initiatives that meet the
requirements of relevance, quality, employer commitment and
technological innovation.
One of the concrete expressions of the results of this strategy
are the Technological Development Centres, in some cases managed
directly by the SENA and in others by the private sector with
the support of this institution. The SENA at present has Centres
in different regions and cities of Colombia, to wit: ASTIN Centre
for Technical Assistance to Industry; Colombian-German Centre,
targeting welding processes and quality control; Metallurgy
Centre, working in the field of iron patternmaking and moulding,
ferrous and non-ferrous metal melting; Colombian-Italian Centre,
in design and manufacturing systems with the aid of computers,
applied to metal mechanical processes and products; Industrial
Management Centre, in the fields of materials testing for metal
mechanical quality control, thermal treatments and metallographic
analysis, as well as programming, planning and control of industrial
and maintenance processes, and industrial chemistry; Wood and
Furniture Colombian-Canadian Centre; Textile Centre; Clothing
Centre; Footwear Technological Centre; Hotel, Tourism and Food
Centre; Graphic and Related Products Centre (SENIGRAF); Commercial
Management and Marketing Centre; Latin American Minor Species
Centre, in livestock activities.
The Inter-American Centre for Knowledge Development
in Vocational Training (ILO/Cinterfor)
Avda. Uruguay 1238 - Montevideo - Uruguay - Tel: (5982) 908 6023 - 902 0557
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