A national qualifications framework (NQF) is a structured system that classifies a country's educational, vocational, and training qualifications according to defined levels based on expected learning outcomes, such as knowledge, skills, and competencies.[1] Each level in an NQF represents increasing complexity and autonomy in learning, typically ranging from basic entry-level qualifications to advanced degrees, enabling clear progression pathways within the education and labor market systems.[2]NQFs serve multiple key purposes, including reforming national education and training systems by standardizing qualifications, enhancing transparency, and promoting comparability across sectors and borders.[3] They facilitate lifelong learning by bridging formal, non-formal, and informal education, supporting credit accumulation and transfer, and improving access to further training for adults.[4] Additionally, NQFs contribute to quality assurance through defined standards and validation processes, while aiding labor market mobility by making qualifications more understandable to employers and institutions.[1]The development of NQFs has accelerated globally since the adoption of the European Qualifications Framework (EQF) in 2008, which acted as a catalyst for national implementations across Europe and inspired similar frameworks worldwide.[2] As of 2022, 134 countries had established comprehensive NQFs, covering all continents, with four major regional frameworks also in operation, such as the EQF, the African Continental Qualifications Framework, and the ASEAN Qualifications Reference Framework.[5] The fifth edition of the Global Inventory, published in 2023, confirms these trends based on 2022 data.[6] These frameworks vary in design—some emphasize outcomes-based levels, while others integrate regulatory bodies for oversight—but collectively aim to align education with economic needs and support international recognition of qualifications.[7]
Overview
Definition and Purpose
A national qualifications framework (NQF) is an instrument for the development, classification, and recognition of qualifications according to a set of criteria for levels of learning achieved, based on learning outcomes that describe what learners know, understand, and can do.[8] It structures existing and new qualifications into a hierarchical system using levels and descriptors to classify education and training achievements across formal, non-formal, and informal contexts.[9]The core purposes of an NQF are to improve transparency by clearly defining qualification levels and outcomes, enhance comparability across sectors and borders, and facilitate the mobility of learners and workers through standardized recognition.[9] It also ensures quality assurance by maintaining consistent national standards and accreditation processes for qualifications and providers.[8] Additionally, NQFs promote lifelong learning by supporting access to education at all stages and enabling pathways for progression.[9]NQFs differ from regional frameworks, which involve multiple countries for cross-border alignment, and international frameworks, which serve as meta-tools for global comparability without direct harmonization.[8] Key benefits include facilitating credit transfer between programs and recognition of prior learning, thereby reducing barriers to educational and professional advancement.[9] National frameworks may align with regional ones, such as the European Qualifications Framework, to extend these advantages internationally.[10]
Historical Development
The concept of national qualifications frameworks (NQFs) emerged in the mid-1980s as a means to structure and harmonize educational and vocational qualifications within countries. One of the earliest comprehensive examples was New Zealand's framework, established with the passage of the Education Amendment Act 1990, which created the New Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA) and introduced a unified system encompassing post-compulsory education from certificates to degrees, marking the world's first fully integrated national system.[11] In France, the Répertoire National des Certifications Professionnelles (RNCP) was established in 2002 by the Social Modernization Law (Law 2002-73), creating a national register to classify professional certifications based on competencies and levels, integrating general and vocational education pathways.[12] This initiative laid foundational principles for outcome-based qualification systems, emphasizing accessibility and recognition of skills acquired through diverse learning routes.The 1990s and early 2000s saw rapid expansion of NQFs, often driven by post-colonial reforms, economic restructuring, and efforts to address skills mismatches. In South Africa, the National Qualifications Framework (NQF) was adopted in 1995 as a cornerstone of post-apartheid reconstruction, aiming to redress inequalities in education by creating a single, integrated system that promotes equity and lifelong learning across racial and sectoral divides.[13]Australia followed suit in 1995 with the Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF), a national policy that standardized qualifications from vocational training to higher education, facilitating mobility and employer recognition.[14] In the United Kingdom, the National Vocational Qualifications (NVQs), introduced in the late 1980s and expanded throughout the 1990s, emphasized work-based competencies and evolved into the Regulated Qualifications Framework (RQF) by 2015, providing a flexible structure for vocational and academic pathways.[15]International initiatives significantly accelerated global adoption, particularly in Europe and beyond. The Bologna Process, launched in 1999 by European ministers of education, promoted a three-cycle degree structure and comparability of qualifications, culminating in the European Qualifications Framework (EQF) in 2008 as a meta-framework to link national systems across 41 cooperating countries.[16] The 2022 Global Inventory documented 79 comprehensive national frameworks across all continents, with many more in development.[5] Concurrently, UNESCO's Institute for Lifelong Learning (UIL), in collaboration with partners like the European Training Foundation (ETF), began global inventories of NQFs in 2009, fostering knowledge sharing and policy development through thematic analyses and country mappings.[17]As of 2025, over 150 countries have implemented or are developing NQFs or equivalent systems, propelled by the United NationsSustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly SDG 4 on inclusive education and lifelong learning, as well as the rising demand for digital and green skills amid globalization and technological change.[18] Regional efforts, such as the African Continental Qualifications Framework (ACQF) adopted by the African Union in 2019, exemplify this trend by harmonizing qualifications across the continent to support intra-African mobility and economic integration.[19] These developments underscore NQFs' role in aligning education with labor market needs and promoting equitable access to opportunities worldwide.
Key Features
Qualification Levels and Descriptors
National qualifications frameworks (NQFs) typically organize qualifications into a series of levels, most commonly ranging from 8 to 10, that span from basic foundational skills to advanced doctoral-level expertise.[20][21] These levels provide a structured hierarchy, where Level 1 generally encompasses basic knowledge and routine skills applicable in familiar contexts, such as entry-level literacy and numeracy, while higher levels like 8 or above involve sophisticated theoretical understanding, innovative research capabilities, and high-level responsibility, often corresponding to doctoral qualifications.[20][3] This architecture ensures a comprehensive coverage of education and training from early schooling through professional development.[22]Level descriptors form the core of NQFs, defining the expected learning outcomes at each stage through standardized criteria that emphasize progressive complexity.[20] Knowledge descriptors distinguish between theoretical and practical dimensions, progressing from recall of basic facts at lower levels to critical analysis and synthesis of complex ideas at advanced ones.[3][21] Skills criteria cover cognitive and practical abilities, evolving from simple task execution under supervision to advanced problem-solving and responsibility for strategic decision-making.[22] Competence descriptors focus on autonomy and application, ranging from guided performance in structured environments to independentinnovation and leadership in unpredictable professional settings.[20][3] Together, these elements ensure that qualifications are comparable based on what learners know, can do, and are able to apply.[21]The volume of learning associated with each level is often quantified using credit systems to measure the notional workload, such as the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS) in higher education contexts, where one credit typically represents 25-30 hours of effort.[22] This approach allows for the accumulation and transfer of credits across qualifications, accommodating both full-time study and part-time or experiential learning.[3] Credits increase with level complexity, providing a transparent indicator of the effort required to achieve the associated outcomes.[21]NQFs facilitate progression pathways that promote both vertical mobility—advancing from lower to higher levels through sequential qualifications—and horizontal mobility, enabling transfers between different sectors or disciplines at the same level.[22][20] These pathways support lifelong learning by recognizing prior learning and experience, thereby enhancing access to education, employment, and career development across formal, non-formal, and informal contexts.[3][21]
Quality Assurance Mechanisms
Quality assurance mechanisms in national qualifications frameworks (NQFs) encompass systematic processes designed to maintain the integrity, relevance, and international recognition of qualifications by verifying that education and training providers meet established standards. These mechanisms typically involve accreditation of providers, which ensures that institutions and programs adhere to criteria related to curriculum design, teaching quality, and assessment practices through rigorous evaluations, often including third-party certifications. External quality reviews complement this by conducting independent audits, site visits, and expert assessments to monitor compliance and identify areas for improvement, thereby fostering continuous enhancement of qualification outcomes.Stakeholder involvement is integral to these mechanisms, engaging governments, employers, learners, and professional bodies in the development and oversight of standards to ensure qualifications align with labor market needs and societal expectations. For instance, tripartite committees or sector skills councils often contribute to policy formulation and review processes, promoting transparency and trust in the system. Key tools include national registers of qualifications, which serve as public databases listing approved credentials to facilitate verification and mobility, and validation procedures for non-formal and informal learning, typically following a four-phase process of identification, documentation, assessment, and certification to recognize prior experience. Periodic reviews evaluate the ongoing validity of qualifications and frameworks, preventing obsolescence and adapting to evolving skills demands.[23]Alignment with international standards, such as those from the OECD guidelines or ISO norms like ISO 29990 for learning services, enhances the credibility and comparability of NQFs globally, enabling cross-border recognition while ensuring inclusivity across vocational and academic pathways. These standards emphasize robust quality management systems that mitigate risks of uneven access, particularly for diverse learners, through inclusive validation and review practices. By tackling coordination gaps and resource constraints via legislative reforms and stakeholder dialogue, QA mechanisms uphold the framework's role in equitable skill development.[23]
Regional Qualifications Frameworks
European Qualifications Framework
The European Qualifications Framework (EQF) was adopted in 2008 by the European Parliament and the Council as a common European reference framework to promote the transparency, comparability, and recognition of qualifications across Europe.[24] It comprises eight levels based on learning outcomes, encompassing knowledge, skills, and responsibility and autonomy, serving as a meta-framework that allows national qualifications frameworks (NQFs) to be mapped and compared.[24] Over 40 countries, including all 27 EU member states and various non-EU nations, participate in the EQF process, with 37 having formally referenced their NQFs to the EQF as of late 2024.[25]The referencing process involves national authorities mapping their qualification levels to the EQF's eight levels, adhering to 10 specific criteria outlined in the 2017 EQF Recommendation, with reports submitted to and endorsed by the EQF Advisory Group.[24] National Coordination Points (NCPs), often operated by ENIC-NARIC centers, play a central role in coordinating this process, supporting institutions and individuals in qualification recognition and ensuring alignment with European standards.[26] This voluntary mechanism enables seamless comparison of qualifications, such as linking a national certificate to an EQF level for cross-border use.The EQF significantly impacts mobility by facilitating the recognition of qualifications, thereby supporting programs like Erasmus+ that promote learner and worker exchanges across Europe.[24] It supplements the Bologna Process, which focuses on higher education through the Qualifications Framework of the European Higher Education Area (QF-EHEA), by extending compatibility to lifelong learning and vocational qualifications.[27] As of 2025, the EQF integrates with the European Digital Credentials for Learning (EDC), allowing digital credentials to embed EQF levels in their metadata for verifiable, tamper-proof sharing via the Europass platform.[28]
African Continental Qualifications Framework
The African Continental Qualifications Framework (ACQF) was launched in 2019 by the African Union as a policy initiative to enhance the transparency, comparability, and recognition of qualifications across the continent, covering all education and training sectors including general, technical, vocational, and higher education.[29][30] It aligns with the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) by facilitating the mobility of learners, workers, and professionals, thereby supporting economic integration and sustainable development.[19][31] The framework serves as a meta-qualifications tool, enabling the referencing of national qualifications frameworks (NQFs) from the African Union's 55 member states to a common continental reference point.[29][32]The ACQF is structured around 10 levels, encompassing qualifications from basic education to advanced professional expertise, with level descriptors defined across three domains: knowledge, skills, and autonomy/responsibility (also referred to as function in some contexts). These descriptors provide a common language for articulating learning outcomes, allowing for the comparison and accumulation of qualifications while accommodating diverse national systems. Referencing guidelines outline the criteria, procedures, and implementation steps for aligning NQFs to the ACQF, promoting mutual trust and quality assurance without imposing uniformity.[32][33]Implementation of the ACQF entered Phase II in 2023, running through 2026 with funding from the European Union in partnership with the African Union, focusing on capacity building, NQF development support, and the rollout of the ACQF Qualifications and Credentials Platform—a digitaltool for registering, verifying, and recognizing qualifications continent-wide.[34][35] This phase builds on the initial validation and mapping efforts, aiming to operationalize the framework across regional economic communities.[36]As of 2025, the ACQF advances the African Union's Agenda 2063 by standardizing vocational and technical skills to boost youth employment and harness the continent's demographic dividend, with an emphasis on inclusive lifelong learning and alignment to green and digital transformations.[37][19] It prioritizes equitable access to quality qualifications, enabling young Africans to participate in intra-continental labor markets and contribute to sustainable economic growth.[38]
Caribbean Qualifications Framework
The Caribbean Qualifications Framework (CQF), developed under the auspices of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), serves as a regional reference system to harmonize qualifications and promote labor mobility across member states, with a particular emphasis on technical and vocational education and training (TVET). The framework's vocational arm, the Caribbean Vocational Qualification (CVQ), was officially launched in October 2007 to certify competencies in key occupational areas, enabling skilled workers to operate seamlessly within the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME).[39] This initiative builds on the foundational role of the Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC), which administers CVQ assessments and integrates them with existing regional examination systems like the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC).[40] The CVQ is structured around five competency-based levels, ranging from Level 1 (entry-level supervised work) to Level 5 (advanced professional or executive roles), focusing on practical skills that prepare individuals for immediate labor market entry.[41]A core feature of the CVQF is its emphasis on regionally agreed occupational standards, developed through collaboration among CARICOM member states, industry stakeholders, and TVET providers, to ensure qualifications reflect shared economic priorities. These standards target high-demand sectors such as tourism, where competencies in community-based services and hospitality operations are certified, and agriculture, including skills in crop production and agro-food processing.[42][43] By 2020, the program had issued thousands of CVQ awards, contributing to workforce development in small island developing states by facilitating the recognition of portable skills.[44] The framework's design promotes quality assurance through the Caribbean Association of National Training Agencies (CANTA), which oversees standard-setting and assessment validation to maintain consistency across borders.The CVQF is integrated into national qualifications systems in over 15 CARICOM countries, including full members like Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, and Guyana, where CVQs align with local TVET policies and support free movement of certified artisans under CSME protocols.[45] Post-2020 updates have incorporated emerging needs, such as green skills, with new occupational standards in areas like renewable energy technology services and climate-smart agriculture to address sustainable development goals in vulnerable island economies.[46][47]Despite its vocational focus, the CVQF has faced challenges in comprehensively covering higher education qualifications beyond Level 5, limiting its scope for advanced academic pathways. Ongoing expansions as of 2025 aim to address this through the broader CQF structure, which spans 10 levels up to doctoral equivalents, by aligning TVET with university credentials and enhancing cross-sector recognition.[48] These efforts, led by CARICOM's Council for Human and Social Development, seek to create a more inclusive framework that supports lifelong learning and regional economic resilience.
ASEAN Qualifications Reference Framework
The ASEAN Qualifications Reference Framework (AQRF) serves as a regional tool to align the national qualifications frameworks (NQFs) of the 10 ASEAN Member States, facilitating comparisons of qualifications based on learning outcomes to support economic integration and labor mobility.[49] It was endorsed in 2014 by the ASEAN Economic Ministers, Education Ministers, and Labour Ministers, with full adoption and implementation commencing in 2015 as part of the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) initiatives.[50] The framework is voluntary, allowing member states to reference their NQFs without mandating changes to national systems, and promotes transparency in skills recognition across the region.[49]Structurally, the AQRF comprises eight levels defined by descriptors of knowledge, skills, and application, enabling benchmarking of qualifications from basic to advanced competencies.[49] The referencing process involves member states submitting reports to the AQRF Committee—established in 2017—to map their NQFs against these levels, fostering mutual recognition agreements (MRAs) in eight priority sectors, including engineering, architecture, accountancy, surveying, medical practitioners, dental practitioners, nursing, and tourism.[49][51] These MRAs aim to standardize professional mobility by recognizing equivalent qualifications and experience, with guidelines for the referencing process updated in August 2020 to refine criteria for alignment and quality assurance.[52]The AQRF enhances intra-ASEAN mobility by integrating with the AEC Blueprint 2025, enabling skilled workers and learners to transfer qualifications more seamlessly and addressing skills mismatches in a growing regional economy.[49] It particularly emphasizes harmonization in technical and vocational education and training (TVET), supporting lifelong learning and sector-specific standards.[50] As of 2023, four countries—Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand—have fully referenced their NQFs to the AQRF, with ongoing efforts in Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, and Viet Nam to complete the process.[53] To bolster verification, initiatives for digital recognition tools were advanced through the development of an ASEAN Guideline on Digital Recognition of Qualifications, targeted for finalization in 2024, aligning with AEC digital economy goals for secure, efficient credential sharing by 2025.[53]
Oceania
Australia
The Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF) serves as the national policy guiding regulated qualifications across Australia's education and training system, encompassing schools, vocational education and training (VET), and higher education to facilitate clear pathways for learners and employers. Established in 1995 as an agreed policy among Commonwealth, state, and territory ministers, it is administered by the Australian Government Department of Education, which monitors its implementation and promotes its use to ensure consistency and quality. The framework's design promotes mobility between education sectors and alignment with labor market needs, enabling individuals to progress from foundational skills to advanced professional expertise.[54]The AQF structures qualifications into 10 levels, each defined by learning outcomes in knowledge, skills, and application, spanning from Certificate I (entry-level basic skills for routine tasks and community participation) to Level 10 Doctoral Degree (advanced original research contributing new knowledge). Lower levels (1-4) focus on foundational vocational competencies, such as Certificates I-IV for practical work skills; mid-levels (5-6) include Diplomas and Advanced Diplomas for technical and paraprofessional roles; and higher levels (7-10) cover Bachelor Degrees, postgraduate awards, and Doctorates for professional and research-oriented careers. This integration allows qualifications like the Diploma to straddle VET and higher education, supporting seamless transitions. A distinctive feature is the "volume of learning," measured in equivalent full-time standard years (typically 1,200 hours per year), which varies by level—for instance, 0.5-1 year for Certificate I, 1-2 years for a Diploma, 3 years for a Bachelor Degree, and 3-4 years for a Master's Degree—ensuring qualifications reflect appropriate depth and duration while accommodating flexible delivery modes. The framework's strong vocational emphasis, particularly through VET qualifications at levels 1-6, prioritizes industry-relevant, competency-based training to build employable skills.[55][56][57]Recent enhancements to the AQF include the National Microcredentials Framework, released in 2022, which provides guidelines for short, focused credentials (less than a full AQF award) to address specific skill needs, with a government pilot program testing their design and delivery in higher education from 2023 to 2026 in priority areas such as digital and emerging workforce capabilities. Implementation and quality assurance are regulated by the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency (TEQSA), which oversees higher education providers (primarily levels 5-10) to ensure compliance with standards, and the Australian Skills Quality Authority (ASQA), which regulates VET providers (levels 1-6, with some overlap) to maintain rigorous, industry-aligned training.[58][59][60]
New Zealand
The New Zealand Qualifications and Credentials Framework (NZQCF), administered by the New Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA), serves as a unified system encompassing all quality-assured qualifications and credentials from secondary education to postgraduate levels. Established initially as the National Qualifications Framework in 1991, it was unified into the NZQF in 2010 and renamed the NZQCF in 2022 to incorporate micro-credentials, spanning 10 levels that progressively increase in complexity, knowledge, and skills required.[11][61] Level 1 represents basic foundational skills, while Level 10 covers doctoral degrees, enabling clear pathways for learners across sectors like vocational training, universities, and secondary schools.[62]A core element of the NZQCF is its credit-based system, where one credit equates to 10 notional learning hours, including directed instruction, self-study, and assessment, allowing for flexible accumulation and transferability of learning outcomes. Micro-credentials, introduced with a dedicated quality assurance system in 2018, are now integrated across all 10 levels as smaller, targeted units of learning that can stack toward full qualifications, enhancing accessibility for lifelong learners.[63][64] The framework emphasizes cultural relevance, particularly by recognizing and advancing Mātauranga Māori (Māori knowledge) through bilingual listings in te reo Māori and English, and fostering ties with Pacific contexts via qualifications in Pacific languages and community-focused programs.[65]The NZQCF aligns with international standards to support global mobility, with NZQA evaluating overseas qualifications against its levels using best practices for comparability, including referencing to frameworks like the Australian Qualifications Framework. In recent developments, the Apprenticeship Boost program has been updated from January 2025 to provide $500 monthly payments to employers for first-year apprentices in targeted occupations and industries, focusing on Level 4 qualifications to support entry into on-the-job training.[66][67] These enhancements, including refreshed level descriptors effective from July 2025, underscore the framework's adaptability to emerging skills demands.[61]
Europe
United Kingdom
The United Kingdom operates a devolved system of qualifications frameworks, reflecting the distinct education policies across its constituent nations: England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Unlike a single national framework, the UK employs separate structures for regulated (non-higher education) qualifications and higher education qualifications, with variations by region to accommodate local priorities. This multi-framework approach ensures qualifications are comparable within and across sectors while allowing flexibility for devolved administrations.[68]In England, Wales, and [Northern Ireland](/page/Northern Ireland), the Regulated Qualifications Framework (RQF), introduced in 2015, organizes non-degree qualifications into eight levels (plus entry levels), based on the knowledge, skills, and application required, ranging from basic entry-level awards to advanced professional diplomas at level 8. The RQF replaced earlier frameworks like the Qualifications and Credit Framework (QCF) and emphasizes clarity in qualification size (via total qualification time) and difficulty, enabling learners and employers to understand progression pathways. It is regulated by three independent bodies: Ofqual in England, Qualifications Wales in Wales, and CCEA Regulation in Northern Ireland, which oversee awarding organizations to maintain standards and quality assurance.[69][70][71]The Framework for Higher Education Qualifications (FHEQ), maintained by the Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education (QAA), operates separately and covers degrees and other higher education awards across the UK, with descriptors for levels 4 through 8 that align broadly with the RQF's upper levels but focus on academic outcomes such as research and critical analysis. This separation ensures higher education qualifications, including bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees, are benchmarked against international standards while integrating with the broader system. In Scotland, the Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework (SCQF) provides a unified 12-level structure encompassing all qualifications, from access levels to doctoral awards, regulated by the Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA) and emphasizing credit accumulation for lifelong learning.[72][73]A key legacy of the UK's vocational qualifications system is the competency-based approach originating from National Vocational Qualifications (NVQs), introduced in the 1980s, which prioritized demonstrable workplace skills and occupational standards; these principles persist in the RQF through work-based assessments and rule-based qualifications that link directly to employer needs. Post-Brexit, the UK's frameworks operate independently from the European Union but maintain a voluntary referencing to the European Qualifications Framework (EQF) to facilitate international recognition, with the RQF levels mapped to EQF levels 1-8 as established in 2019. In 2025, attention has shifted toward expanding T Levels—two-year, level 3 technical qualifications equivalent in size to three A Levels—which integrate classroom learning with industry placements to address skills gaps in sectors like construction and digital, with over 20 subjects now available and full rollout supporting technical education pathways.[68][74]
Ireland
The National Framework of Qualifications (NFQ) in Ireland is a single, unified, learner-centered system established in 2003 under the Qualifications (Education and Training) Act to structure and compare qualifications across all education and training sectors.[75] It spans 10 levels, from Level 1 (basic literacy and foundational skills) to Level 10 (doctoral degrees and higher doctorates), with each level defined by specific descriptors of knowledge, skill, and competence to ensure transparency and progression for learners.[76] Managed by Quality and Qualifications Ireland (QQI), the state agency responsible for quality assurance and awards in further and higher education since its formation in 2012, the NFQ promotes lifelong learning by integrating general, vocational, and professional qualifications into one coherent framework.[75]Key elements of the NFQ include standardized award types: major awards (full qualifications at each level), minor awards (components building toward majors), special purpose awards (targeted skills), and supplemental awards (additional competencies), which collectively support flexible pathways and recognition of diverse learning experiences.[75] A distinctive feature is its strong emphasis on recognizing non-formal and informal learning through prior learning assessment, enabling credit accumulation and transfer without rigid prerequisites, thus accommodating adult learners and those from varied backgrounds.[76] This learner-focused approach is exemplified in the NFQ's Framework for Access, Transfer, and Progression (NFQ-FATP), which outlines policies and procedures to facilitate entry into programs, movement between qualifications, and advancement across sectors, ensuring equitable opportunities regardless of initial entry point.[77]The NFQ integrates seamlessly with the European Qualifications Framework (EQF) and the Bologna Process, particularly through the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS) for higher education levels (7-10), allowing Irish qualifications to be recognized internationally and supporting mobility for students and workers.[75] In 2024, updates enhanced inclusivity and innovation, including new Further Education and Training (FET) Awards Standards for Levels 1-4 aligned with EU key competences to better support diverse learners, and the incorporation of digital badges for micro-credentials and recognition of prior learning (RPL), enabling verifiable, portable records of short-form achievements within the framework.[78][79] These developments, detailed in QQI's August 2024 guide and ongoing RPL initiatives, reinforce the NFQ's role in promoting accessible, future-oriented education.[75] In 2025, further advancements include the QQI Statement of Strategy 2025-2027 prioritizing future-proofing the NFQ as an authoritative information source, a White Paper consultation on qualifications at NFQ Levels 5 and 6 (closing November 2025), and new Award Standards for Youth Work at Level 5 launched in September 2025.[80][81][82]
France
The Répertoire National des Certifications Professionnelles (RNCP) serves as France's primary framework for professional qualifications, encompassing diplomas, titles, and certificates that validate occupational competencies. Established in 1985 through Decree No. 85-906, the RNCP was reformed by the Law on Social Modernization in 2002 and further updated in 2018 to align with evolving labor market needs, replacing the earlier five-level nomenclature with an eight-level structure. These levels range from 1 (basic operational knowledge for simple tasks) to 8 (advanced expertise for strategic leadership), emphasizing increasing complexity in knowledge, skills, and autonomy, with professional certifications typically spanning levels 3 to 8.[83] The framework supports vocational and higher education pathways by registering qualifications that demonstrate employability, with over 15,000 entries as of 2023, including both public and private sector awards.[84]Managed by France Compétences, a public institution created in 2019 under Law No. 2018-771, the RNCP promotes modular, block-based certifications to facilitate flexible learning and partial qualification accumulation.[85] This labor market-driven approach involves certification commissions comprising employers, employee representatives, and training experts, who evaluate applications based on occupational needs, employability outcomes, and skill relevance every five years. A key feature is the Validation des Acquis de l'Expérience (VAE), which enables individuals with at least one year of relevant professional or non-professional experience to obtain full or partial RNCP recognition without formal training, supporting lifelong learning and career mobility for over 40,000 candidates annually.[86] Complementing the RNCP, the Répertoire Spécifique (RS), introduced in 2019, registers emerging skill certifications that do not fully meet RNCP criteria, such as short modular trainings for new professions in digital or sustainable sectors.[87]Since 2019, the RNCP has been fully referenced to the European Qualifications Framework (EQF), with its eight levels directly corresponding to EQF levels 1 through 8, enhancing cross-border recognition and mobility within the EU.[88] This alignment, detailed in the 2019 referencing report, integrates academic and professional pathways while prioritizing transparency in qualification descriptors.[87] As of 2025, the framework emphasizes certifications for the green transition, with France Compétences prioritizing RNCP registrations in energy efficiency, renewable technologies, and climateadaptation to address ecological challenges, as outlined in the national energy and climate strategy.[89]
Germany
The German Qualifications Framework for Lifelong Learning (Deutscher Qualifikationsrahmen, DQR) was officially implemented on May 1, 2013, through a joint resolution by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) and the Standing Conference of the Ministers of Education and Cultural Affairs (KMK).[90] This framework serves as an eight-level transparency instrument that integrates qualifications from vocational education and training (VET), higher education, and continuing education, facilitating comparability within Germany and across Europe by referencing its levels directly to the corresponding levels of the European Qualifications Framework (EQF).[91] The DQR promotes lifelong learning by making qualification outcomes explicit and permeable across educational sectors, with over 1,100 qualifications referenced to its levels as of 2022, including significant numbers at levels 4 (639) and 6 (463).[92]The structure of the DQR is based on learning outcomes described across four competence areas: knowledge and skills (as components of professional competence) and responsibility and autonomy (as components of personal competence, encompassing social and self-competence).[93] Knowledge is characterized by its depth and breadth, ranging from basic factual understanding at level 1 to innovative developments at level 8; skills involve cognitive, practical, and problem-solving abilities, from routine tasks to creative solutions in complex contexts.[94] Responsibility and autonomy emphasize the ability to act independently, supervise others, and manage processes, with increasing scope from supervised execution at lower levels to strategic leadership at higher ones.[95] This descriptor-based matrix particularly accommodates Germany's dual system of VET, where initial vocational training—combining workplace apprenticeships and school-based instruction—typically aligns to level 4, ensuring recognition of practical competencies alongside theoretical knowledge.[96]The development and oversight of the DQR are coordinated by the DQR Working Group, which includes representatives from the KMK, the BIBB (Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training), and other stakeholders such as higher education institutions and employer organizations.[97] Qualification providers engage in a self-certification process to reference their programs to DQR levels, supported by guidelines and validation from the working group to maintain coherence and quality across the framework.[98] This voluntary yet systematic approach has enhanced transparency, with the BIBB playing a key role in integrating VET qualifications, including those from the dual system, into the framework.[96]
Africa
South Africa
The South African National Qualifications Framework (SA NQF) emerged as a pivotal instrument for addressing educational inequities in the post-apartheid era, aiming to create a unified system that promotes access, mobility, and redress for historically disadvantaged groups. Established to integrate fragmented education and training systems inherited from apartheid, the SA NQF facilitates lifelong learning by registering qualifications and recognizing diverse learning pathways, including formal, non-formal, and informal education. Managed by the South African Qualifications Authority (SAQA), it supports economic development by aligning skills with labor market needs while ensuring quality assurance across sectors.[13]The framework's origins trace back to the labor movement in the 1970s, where trade unions advocated for skills training to counter discriminatory wage practices, evolving through key policy documents in the early 1990s. The SAQA Act No. 58 of 1995 formally established SAQA and introduced an initial eight-level NQF, focusing on unit standards—modular components defining specific competencies—to enable flexible, outcomes-based learning. The NQF Act No. 67 of 2008, effective from 2009, revised the structure to 10 levels with unified descriptors emphasizing knowledge, skills, and application, while introducing three sub-frameworks: the Higher Education Qualifications Sub-framework (HEQSF, levels 5–10, overseen by the Council on Higher Education); the General and Further Education and Training Qualifications Sub-framework (GFETQSF, levels 1–4, managed by Umalusi); and the Occupational Qualifications Sub-framework (OQSF, levels 1–8, administered by the Quality Council for Trades and Occupations). This design allows for sector-specific quality assurance while maintaining national coherence. A core feature is the Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL), which assesses informal and experiential learning against NQF standards, promoting equity by validating non-traditional pathways without requiring full requalification.[13][99][100][101]Amendments in 2017 to the NQF Act strengthened quality assurance by enhancing SAQA's oversight of foreign qualifications, tightening registration processes, and clarifying roles of the three Quality Councils to prevent proliferation of substandard credentials. These changes addressed early implementation challenges, such as overlaps between sub-frameworks and delays in phasing out legacy unit standards in favor of occupational qualifications. In recent years, emphasis has grown on artisan development to bolster vocational training; the National Apprenticeship and Artisan Development Strategy 2030, aligned with the NQF, targets producing 30,000 qualified artisans annually to meet industrial demands and reduce youth unemployment. The SA NQF now integrates over 12,000 qualifications and unit standards via the National Learners' Records Database (NLRD), enabling learner mobility and employer verification of credentials. South Africa's framework aligns with the African Continental Qualifications Framework (ACQF) through mapping exercises, facilitating regional recognition of qualifications.[102][103][104][101]
Kenya
The Kenya National Qualifications Framework (KNQF) was enacted through the Kenya National Qualifications Framework Act No. 22 of 2014, which established a comprehensive system for classifying, registering, and assuring the quality of qualifications across all education and training sectors.[105] This framework operates under the oversight of the Technical and Vocational Education and Training Authority (TVETA), created by the TVET Act No. 29 of 2013, to emphasize technical skills development.[106] The KNQF comprises 10 levels, ranging from basic trade skills at Level 1 (entry-level competencies in foundational knowledge and practical abilities) to advanced doctoral research at Level 10 (original contributions to knowledge with high-level strategic leadership).[107] Each level is defined by descriptors in knowledge, skills, and competencies, facilitating clear progression pathways across academic, TVET, and industrial sub-frameworks.[107]A core feature of the KNQF is its competency-based approach, integrated with Competency-Based Education and Training (CBET) curricula that prioritize demonstrable skills, attitudes, and values over time-based learning.[108] This model allows for flexible credit accumulation—where one credit equates to 10 notional learning hours—and supports recognition of prior learning to enhance access and equity.[107] The framework aligns closely with Kenya Vision 2030, particularly its economic pillar on industrialization and sustainable growth, by standardizing qualifications to bridge education-labor market gaps and promote employability in key sectors like manufacturing and technology.[109]Implementation is led by the Kenya National Qualifications Authority (KNQA), established in 2015 as the regulatory body to coordinate qualification development, registration, and quality assurance.[110] By 2023, over 1,200 qualifications had been registered in the National Qualifications Database, including programs from universities, polytechnics, and professional bodies, marking significant progress toward full operationalization.[111]In 2025, the KNQF advanced through the gazettement of updated regulations emphasizing digital skills integration, such as digitizing the Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) process via a management information system to streamline skills validation in the digital economy.[112] Concurrently, KNQA participated in East African Community workshops to harmonize qualifications, fostering mutual recognition and labor mobility across the region, as highlighted in the June 2025 Entebbe meeting on cross-border credential equating.[113]
Nigeria
The Nigerian Skills Qualifications Framework (NSQF) was launched in February 2018 by the Federal Minister of Education, evolving from the National Vocational Qualifications Framework (NVQF), which had been approved by the Federal Executive Council in 2013 and renamed to NSQF in 2017.[114][115][116] Administered by the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), the framework targets vocational and technical education to standardize skills recognition across formal, non-formal, and informal learning pathways.[117] It comprises six levels, progressing from basic foundational skills at Level 1 (e.g., entry-level operative tasks) to advanced professional competencies at Level 6 (e.g., managerial and innovative roles in specialized sectors).The NSQF adopts a competency-based structure, emphasizing outcomes in knowledge, practical skills, responsibility, and autonomy to align qualifications with industry needs and promote labor market relevance.[118] Qualifications are developed using National Occupational Standards (NOS), with over 80 standards created across sectors like construction, agriculture, and information technology, primarily at Levels 3 and 5.[118] This approach facilitates recognition of prior learning and enables progression routes, allowing learners to advance without necessarily completing every intermediate level.[119]Governance involves the NSQF Committee under the National Council on Skills, chaired by the Vice President, which coordinates policy and stakeholder engagement, while NBTE serves as the primary regulatory body.[119] Assessments occur through accredited industry-led centers, combining workplace evaluations and training center simulations to verify competencies against NOS, ensuring impartiality and practical applicability.[118] Sector Skills Councils and Awarding Bodies further support qualification design and certification.[117]Recent advancements include the release of an updated operational manual in 2024, providing detailed guidelines for implementation, quality assurance, and actor roles to enhance efficiency.[120] The framework supports broader youthemployment initiatives, with government programs targeting certification for millions of young Nigerians by 2025 to address skill gaps and foster economic inclusion, including a national skills drive aiming for 20 million beneficiaries by 2030.[121][122] Additionally, the NSQF shows potential for alignment with the AfricanContinental Qualifications Framework (ACQF) to facilitate regional mobility.
Asia
India
The National Skills Qualifications Framework (NSQF) is an outcome-based system introduced by the Government of India in December 2013 under the Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship to integrate skills development with formal education.[123] It structures qualifications across 10 levels, defined by increasing complexity in knowledge, skills, and aptitude, spanning from foundational competencies at level 1 (equivalent to basic school education) to advanced research capabilities at level 10 (doctoral level).[124] The framework incorporates a credit system that enables accumulation, transfer, and recognition of learning outcomes, promoting seamless progression between vocational training, higher education, and employment.A core feature of the NSQF is its alignment with the National Vocational Education Qualifications Framework (NVEQF), which provides common principles for vocational qualifications in schools and institutes, ensuring consistency and portability across educational streams.[125] To enhance flexibility, the framework includes Assessment of Unique Requirements (AUR), a mechanism that allows recognition of priorexperience or non-formal learning—such as driving licenses or work history—to meet entry criteria for qualifications, thereby accommodating diverse learner backgrounds.[126] This outcome-focused approach emphasizes demonstrable competencies over time-based inputs, facilitating multiple entry and exit points in education and training programs.Implementation is led through collaborations with the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC), which develops sector-specific standards and qualification packs in partnership with industry bodies.[127] As of November 2023, the NSQF had approved 4,745 qualifications across sectors like IT, manufacturing, and healthcare, enabling standardized assessment and certification.[128]In 2025, the framework underwent further expansion to address evolving labor market demands, incorporating skills training for the gig economy—such as through the Swiggy Skills Initiative for platform workers—and integrating AI modules into employability curricula to build digital competencies.[129][130] These updates align with the National Education Policy 2020, enhancing the NSQF's role in bridging skill gaps in high-growth areas.[131]
Indonesia
The Indonesian National Qualifications Framework, known as Kerangka Kualifikasi Nasional Indonesia (KKNI), was enacted through Presidential Regulation No. 8 of 2012, establishing a nine-level structure to integrate and equate competencies from formal education, non-formal training, and professionalexperience.[132] This framework serves as a bridge between academic, vocational, and professional pathways, enabling the recognition of qualifications across sectors to support workforce mobility and national development goals.[133]Administration of the KKNI falls under specialized national agencies, with the National Accreditation Agency for Higher Education (BAN-PT) overseeing accreditation and quality assurance for tertiary-level qualifications, while the National Accreditation Board for Schools and Madrasahs (BAN-SM) manages vocational programs at the secondary level, including Sekolah Menengah Kejuruan (SMK). These bodies ensure that programs align with KKNI descriptors, promoting standardized outcomes that meet industry demands.[134]Each of the nine levels is defined by four core descriptors: mastery of knowledge, work skills, attitudes and values, and authority with responsibility. For instance, higher levels emphasize advanced problem-solving, innovation, and managerial authority, while lower levels focus on basic operational competencies and supervised tasks.[135] This competency-based approach facilitates vertical and horizontal mobility, allowing individuals to progress from vocational certificates to university degrees or professional endorsements.The KKNI aligns with the ASEAN Qualifications Reference Framework (AQRF) through a comprehensive referencing process finalized in the 2020 report, which maps Indonesian levels to regional standards for enhanced cross-border recognition.[136] A distinctive element is its incorporation of professional certifications, such as those at level 7, which validate specialized workplace expertise without requiring formal diplomas and are issued by authorized bodies to bridge skill gaps in key industries.[136]To address the digital economy's expansion, the framework has seen updates in competency standards, including new Standar Kompetensi Kerja Nasional Indonesia (SKKNI) for digital sectors like e-commerce, supporting skills development amid Indonesia's projected digital market growth to over $130 billion by 2025.[137] Applied nationwide to a population exceeding 270 million, the KKNI references hundreds of SKKNI across occupations, enabling certification for over 500,000 annual vocational graduates and fostering equitable access to qualified employment.[138][139]
Pakistan
Pakistan's National Qualifications Framework (NQF) is an integrated 8-level system that spans qualifications from pre-primary education to doctoral degrees, emphasizing technical and vocational education and training (TVET) to enhance employability and align with labor market needs. Developed collaboratively by the Higher Education Commission (HEC) and the National Vocational and Technical Training Commission (NAVTTC) between 2015 and 2017, the framework adopts an outcome-based approach, defining qualifications by knowledge, skills, competencies, and application levels rather than input-based metrics like duration or credit hours. This structure builds on earlier initiatives, such as HEC's 2009 efforts and the National Skills Strategy 2009-2013, and incorporates elements from the European Qualifications Framework (EQF) to facilitate international comparability.[140][141][142]A key feature of the NQF is the inclusion of National Vocational Qualifications (NVQs) under the National Vocational Qualifications Framework (NVQF), which occupies levels 1 through 8 and supports pathways from basic skills to advanced professional certifications. Levels 1-4 focus on foundational vocational certificates, level 5 on diplomas, and levels 6-8 on graduate and postgraduate equivalents, enabling seamless transitions between TVET and general education streams. The framework aligns with international standards, particularly for export-oriented sectors like textiles, IT, and manufacturing, by incorporating competency-based training and recognition of prior learning (RPL) to boost workforce mobility and global competitiveness.[141][143][144]Implementation is overseen by NAVTTC at the federal level and provincial TVET authorities, with initial pilots launched in Punjab and Sindh provinces starting in 2013 to test curricula in over 20 occupational fields, such as hospitality and construction. These pilots informed the full nationwide rollout targeted for 2023, which includes establishing a National Qualifications Register for accredited programs and integrating NVQs into industry-led training institutes. By 2025, the framework has shifted emphasis toward competencies linked to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), with new bilateral TVET agreements facilitating joint training programs in infrastructure, energy, and logistics to address skill gaps in these high-growth areas.[142][145][146]
China
China lacks a unified national qualifications framework (NQF), instead relying on a dual system of educational and occupational qualifications managed by separate government ministries. The educational qualifications, overseen by the Ministry of Education (MOE), encompass diplomas from primary through higher education levels, including associate degrees from 2-3 year vocational programs, bachelor's degrees (4 years), master's degrees (2-3 years), and doctoral degrees (3-4 years). Graduates from vocational colleges can advance to bachelor's programs via examinations, promoting pathways between vocational and academic tracks. Meanwhile, the occupational qualification system, administered by the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security (MHRSS), originated with the 1994 Regulations on Occupational Qualification Certificates and currently includes 1,639 recognized occupations with corresponding national standards across diverse sectors such as manufacturing, services, and emerging technologies. These standards define skills requirements and support over 1,100 vocational certificates, emphasizing practical competencies for workforce entry and progression.[147][148]A core feature of the occupational system is its five-level vocational ladder, ranging from Level 5 (primary worker) for basic skills to Level 1 (senior technician) for advanced expertise, mirroring international models like the UK's NVQ while adapting to China's industrial needs. This structure facilitates skill certification through assessments, with millions obtaining certificates annually—over 80 million by 2008, and continued growth supporting labor market demands. Higher education standards under the MOE ensure alignment with national development goals, such as integrating vocational training with academic credentials to foster lifelong learning. Recent reforms, including the "1 + X" certificate system introduced in 2019, allow students to earn both academic diplomas and vocational certificates, enhancing employability in key industries.[149][149][147]The 2019 China Education Modernization 2035 plan marks a pivotal development, outlining a vision for a comprehensive education system by 2035 that includes proposals for an NQF to unify vocational and academic pathways, promote equity, and support lifelong education. This plan emphasizes integrating industry needs into education, with strategic tasks like digitalization and openness to international standards. In alignment efforts, China has partially referenced the ASEAN Qualifications Reference Framework (AQRF) through bilateral cooperation, exploring mutual recognition pilots under the China-ASEAN Vision 2030 to facilitate skills mobility, particularly in vocational sectors. Additionally, qualifications development prioritizes skills for the Belt and Road Initiative, with programs like the 2024 International Talent Certification targeting technical competencies for international projects.[150][150][151]As of 2025, seven national digital economy pilot zones have been established in areas including Tianjin, Shanghai, and Jiangsu to advance innovation in digital manufacturing and the economy amid broader reforms.[152]
Americas
Barbados
The National/Caribbean Vocational Qualifications (N/CVQs) system in Barbados represents the country's primary vocational component of its national qualifications framework, emphasizing competency-based assessments for practical, work-related skills. Introduced in the early 2000s under the oversight of the Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) Council—a statutory body established by the government—this framework consists of five levels, ranging from entry-level supervised roles (Level 1) to advanced charter standards (Level 5). The TVET Council serves as the awarding body, ensuring qualifications meet rigorous occupational standards that align with the regional Caribbean Vocational Qualification Framework (CVQF) for cross-border recognition.[153][154][155]The N/CVQs focus on developing competencies in key economic sectors, particularly services such as hospitality, accounting, and administration, as well as construction and technical trades, to enhance employability and industry competitiveness. These qualifications are earned through a combination of training, workplace assessments, and demonstrations of core skills like problem-solving and teamwork, making them suitable for full-time employees, part-time workers, and self-employed individuals. By prioritizing practical outcomes over theoretical knowledge, the system supports Barbados' workforce needs in a service-driven economy.[156][157]Implementation is coordinated by the TVET Council, which accredits training providers and monitors quality, while delivery occurs through institutions like the Barbados Vocational Training Board (BVTB), offering programs such as skills training, apprenticeships, and evening courses tailored to N/CVQ requirements. In the 2018–2019 financial year, for example, the TVET Council awarded 1,042 N/CVQs, illustrating the system's scale in certifying skilled workers annually and contributing to national labor market alignment. The N/CVQs integrate with the broader Barbados Qualifications and Credit Framework (BQCF), approved by Cabinet, to facilitate credit transfer and lifelong learning pathways.[158][159][155]
Caribbean Region
The Caribbean Vocational Qualification (CVQ) serves as the regional qualifications framework for technical and vocational education and training (TVET) across the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), launched in October 2007 to standardize competency-based certifications and facilitate skilled labor mobility within the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME).[39] Administered jointly by the Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC) and the CARICOM Secretariat through the Caribbean Association of National Training Agencies (CANTA), the CVQ encompasses five levels ranging from entry-level supervised work (Level 1) to advanced professional or managerial roles (Level 5), aligning with international benchmarks for immediate employability.[160] It covers various occupational areas, with over 200 regionally developed standards that emphasize core work practices, including knowledge, skills, and attitudes validated by industry experts.[160]Key features of the CVQ include regionally harmonized competency standards, which enable recognition of prior learning and articulation between qualification levels, promoting lifelong learning and workforce development.[161] The framework incorporates workplace-based assessments, allowing candidates to achieve certification through apprenticeships or on-the-job training, thereby bridging institutional education with practical industry needs across CARICOM member states.[162] By 2011, a total of 5,135 CVQ awards had been issued region-wide, with 2,872 awarded in schools and 2,263 in workplaces, marking early progress in building a skilled labor pool to support CSME goals of free movement for artisans and technicians.[163] These achievements have enhanced regional economic integration by enabling certified workers to seek employment across borders without re-qualification barriers.[45]Despite these advancements, the CVQ faces challenges such as uneven adoption, with only a limited number of member states initially authorized to issue awards—three by 2011 and seven by 2012—due to variations in national TVET infrastructure and capacity.[164] To address implementation gaps and modernize delivery, CARICOM initiated a push toward digital certification and blended learning in 2024, including a pilot project for digitalizing TVET processes and a regional workshop validating online courseware for key economic sectors.[165] These efforts aim to expand access, improve quality assurance, and boost award numbers to better support CSME labor mobility amid evolving global demands.[165]
Canada
Canada does not have a unified national qualifications framework, unlike many other countries; instead, education and training qualifications are managed at the provincial and territorial levels, with a pan-Canadian framework specifically for higher education degrees.[166] This decentralized approach reflects Canada's federal structure, where provinces hold primary responsibility for education, leading to variations in qualification standards across jurisdictions.[167]The Canadian Degree Qualifications Framework (CDQF), adopted in 2007 by the Council of Ministers of Education, Canada (CMEC), provides a national reference for postsecondary degree programs, outlining expected learning outcomes for three principal levels: bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees.[168] At the bachelor's level, graduates demonstrate foundational knowledge, critical thinking, and communication skills across 6-8 semesters (90-120 credits), preparing them for professional or further study.[168] Master's programs build specialized expertise and research abilities over 2-6 semesters, emphasizing problem-solving and originality, while doctoral degrees focus on advanced independentresearch and contributions to knowledge, typically spanning 3-6 years.[168]Quality assurance for these degrees is supported provincially, such as through Ontario's Postsecondary EducationQualityAssessment Board (PEQAB), which reviews and recommends approvals for degree programs to ensure alignment with CDQF standards.[169]Provincial frameworks address a broader range of qualifications, including vocational and apprenticeship programs. For example, the Ontario Qualifications Framework (OQF), established to encompass postsecondary credentials, defines 13 levels from basic certificates to doctoral degrees, integrating apprenticeships at levels 3 and 4 for skilled trades training.[170] While there is no unified national vocational education and training (VET) framework, the interprovincial Red Seal Program sets common standards and examinations for over 50 skilled trades, such as electricians and carpenters, enabling certification mobility across provinces upon passing a standardized exam.[171] In 2022, the Pan-Canadian Framework for the Assessment and Recognition of Foreign Qualifications was introduced by the Forum of Labour Market Ministers to standardize the evaluation of international credentials, promoting labor market integration for immigrants by aligning them with Canadian standards.[172]As of 2025, ongoing efforts toward greater national alignment are advancing through labor mobility initiatives, including the Free Trade and Labour Mobility in Canada Act (part of Bill C-5, enacted in June 2025), which mandates mutual recognition of provincial certifications for federally regulated occupations and skilled trades to reduce interprovincial barriers.[173] These accords build on the Canadian Free Trade Agreement's labor mobility provisions, aiming to facilitate credential portability without creating a centralized NQF.[174]
United States
The United States lacks a formal national qualifications framework, with credentialing and qualification recognition operating in a highly decentralized manner primarily through state-level licensing boards and professional associations. Occupational licensing, which covers over 1,000 professions across states, is managed independently by each of the 50 states and territories, leading to variations in requirements for entry, practice, and mobility for workers. This fragmentation often hinders interstate credential portability and employer understanding of diverse qualifications.[175][176]To address gaps in higher education credentials, the Lumina Foundation released the Degree Qualifications Profile (DQP) in 2011, providing a voluntary, learning-outcomes-based framework for associate, bachelor's, and master's degrees across five key areas: specialized knowledge, broad and integrative knowledge, intellectual skills, applied and collaborative learning, and civic and global learning. The DQP emphasizes what degree holders should know and be able to do at each of its three levels, promoting consistency in student learning outcomes without mandating curriculum changes, and has been adopted or referenced by over 400 institutions to enhance transferability and assessment.[177][178]The United States Qualifications Framework (USQF), established as a nonprofit initiative in 2022, seeks to develop a comprehensive national framework to improve credential transparency and interoperability for learners and the labor market. Drawing from international models and prior efforts like the DQP and the 2015 Beta American Credentials Framework, the USQF aims to encompass the full spectrum of U.S. credentials, including degrees, certifications, badges, and licenses, by facilitating recognition, mobility, and validation of diverse learning pathways.[179][180][181]As of 2025, the USQF remains a voluntary, non-governmental effort with no federal mandate, conducting pilots in workforce development sectors to test alignment and usability among employers, educators, and licensing bodies. These pilots emphasize integrating digital badges and micro-credentials to support lifelong learning and economic mobility, while promoting compatibility with international frameworks for global credential recognition. The initiative continues to engage stakeholders through its Advisory Council, building on research from international experiences to refine the framework without imposing regulatory requirements.[182][183][184]