On-the-job training: A German export hit losing favour at home

(Repeats story from Friday)

* German vocational training is popular abroad

* But at home young people increasingly choose university

* Graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/2JRuDCK

By Michelle Martin

WINSEN AN DER LUHE, Germany, July 27 (Reuters) - Nina Lorea Kley urgently needs young people to train as vehicle builders at her company's factories in northern and eastern Germany. She has enough orders and money to hire 20 this summer but can only find 14.

Feldbinder makes 2,000 customised trailers, railway wagons and containers a year but won't be able to keep that up without new recruits, especially because many employees are due to retire in the next few years.

"If we don't manage to fill jobs that become free we'll have to think about which orders we can fulfil," said Kley, 41, a managing director at the firm her father co-founded four decades ago. "We simply wouldn't be able to take on certain orders anymore due to a lack of staff."

Feldbinder is not alone. More than a third of German companies could not fill all of their training places last year while almost one in ten received no applications for such roles, a survey by the DIHK Chambers of Commerce found.

Last year, the number of vacancies for training positions was at its highest for more than 20 years.

Germany's twin-track vocational training system, which involves up to 3-1/2 years of on-the-job learning in firms alongside theory lessons at vocational school, is credited with giving Germany the European Union's lowest youth jobless rate - 6.8 percent in 2017 against an EU average of 16.8 percent.

Widely admired abroad, the training system is being exported in various forms to Europe, Asia, Africa and the United States. But its popularity is waning at home as young people increasingly prefer the higher status of a university degree.

That could hurt growth in Europe's largest economy by exacerbating a skilled labour shortage, which is partly caused by hundreds of thousands of ageing employees leaving the labour market every year.

"It's a dangerous trend - Germany is running out of skilled workers," said DIHK President Eric Schweitzer. "At first, orders lie around for longer, then firms have to reject them outright - to the point where entire sectors run into problems."

In response, the government has vowed to strengthen the training system and make it more attractive during this legislative period, which runs to 2021.

It plans to invest in equipment so vocational schools can adjust to the digital age, put a minimum trainee wage into law, boost career guidance at secondary schools, promote part-time training to help people reconcile their work and family life, and reduce the problem of regional imbalances in the jobs market by improving mobility.