Future Skills Centre invests to turn PIAAC skills data into Canadian workforce insights
May 26, 2026 – Canada’s productivity and prosperity depend in part on how effectively the country uses the skills of its workforce. To strengthen this foundation, the Future Skills Centre (FSC), funded by the Government of Canada’s Future Skills Program, announced the selection of 10 research projects to tap into the potential of the OECD’s Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC) dataset.
This initiative aims to turn complex data on adult skills into actionable insights, equipping policymakers and workforce leaders across Canada with timely evidence needed to navigate ongoing labour market challenges.
The 10 selected projects explore diverse aspects of Canada’s skills landscape and together address critical gaps in evidence on Canada’s skills performance, strengthen national data infrastructure and capacity, and mobilize findings in ways that will inform policies, programs, and practices.
By applying advanced data analytics, the research will uncover how specific skill profiles interact with long-term wages, health, and economic stability. Other projects will investigate the challenge of skills mismatches and overqualification Canada’s productivity gap.
“Canada is facing a defining moment for our prosperity and the skills in our workforce are a key building block. While we boast strong foundational skills, we may be leaving billions of dollars on the table because we aren’t effectively matching those skills to the jobs of the future. By maximizing this once-in-a-decade dataset and supporting a network of researchers investigating these critical questions, we are identifying the specific levers that will allow us to close the productivity gap, boost wages, and ensure our economy is resilient by design in the face of rapid disruption.”
– Noel Baldwin, Executive Director, Future Skills Centre
Quick Facts
- The OECD’s Survey of Adult Skills (PIAAC) is an international survey of adults, including nearly 12,000 in Canada, that measures adult proficiency in three primary skills for work and daily life: literacy; numeracy; and adaptive problem solving. Two cycles of data have been published offering insights into how skills proficiency has changed over time.
- PIAAC data, released at the end of 2024, provides an opportunity to improve Canada’s understanding of relationships among skills, productivity, prosperity and well-being, and to use that knowledge to design better policies and programs.
- In 2025, FSC launched an open call for proposals aimed at leveraging newly released PIAAC data on adult skills to inform practical insights for policymakers and workforce leaders across Canada.
- Canada faces challenges in skills performance and achieving equitable outcomes. Proficiency in literacy, numeracy and adaptive problem-solving skills has remained too low and stagnant over time.
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About FSC
The Future Skills Centre (FSC) is a forward-thinking centre for research and collaboration dedicated to driving innovation in skills development so that everyone in Canada can be prepared for the future of work. We partner with policymakers, researchers, practitioners, employers and labour groups, and post-secondary institutions to solve pressing labour market challenges and ensure that everyone can benefit from relevant lifelong learning opportunities. We are founded by a consortium whose members are Toronto Metropolitan University, Blueprint, and Signal49 Research, and are funded by the Government of Canada’s Future Skills Program.
Media Contact
Annamaria Nunziata
Communications Manager
Future Skills Centre
communications@fsc-ccf.ca
647-242-6156