Vocational training has become more important than ever for our economy to grow and provide higher standards of living. However, how does Australia’s Vocational Education and Training system stack up?
Australian and German vocational systems are an interesting comparison with two very different outcomes.
Germany’s Ausbildung system isn’t just training, it’s the backbone of Germany’s skilled workforce.
In 2026, 1.3M young people enrolled across 320+ recognised professions, all in a paid, dual system that blends workplace learning with vocational school.
Why it works:
- Earn while you learn
- 2–3.5 years structured training
- Strong employer involvement
- Qualifications recognised across the EU
- Direct pipeline into stable employment
In comparison, Australia’s VET System offers flexibility through TAFEs, RTOs, apprenticeships and traineeships but outcomes vary.
Only a portion of learners are in paid, employment‑based pathways, and skills shortages persist across trades and technical fields.
The contrasting differences:
🇦🇺 Provider‑led vs 🇩🇪 Employer‑driven
🇦🇺 Variable quality vs 🇩🇪 Standardised national system
🇦🇺 Mixed employment outcomes vs 🇩🇪 Strong workforce pipeline
The issue:
As Australia faces critical shortages in construction, engineering and care sectors, the question becomes:
What would our VET look like if we adopted more of Germany’s employer‑integrated, earn‑while‑you‑learn model?
What is Ausbildung? 👉 German Dual Training Explained (2026)