TY - JOUR
T1 - Talent Policy
T2 - Problems and Solutions
AU - Robb, Catherine M.
AU - Harel Ben Shahar, Tammy
AU - Meyer, Kirsten
AU - Vetter, Barbara
AU - Steenbeek, Henderien
AU - Sardoc, Mitja
AU - den Hartigh, Ruud
PY - 2025/4/23
Y1 - 2025/4/23
N2 - The identification and development of talent have long been a central target of policy making in various domains, including education, sports, the arts and business. Given the importance of talent for success in a competitive global market, governments and businesses across the globe continually devise strategic policies to identify, attract and preserve both national and international talent. Most of these talent-related practices and policies (implicitly) assume that a person's talent is predetermined and fixed, that it is readily identifiable and that effective talent development requires early identification and specific, targeted training. However, these assumptions are problematically unsupported by recent empirical and conceptual scientific research. Instead, the research shows that talent development is dynamic and context-dependent, and that early identification is an unreliable predictor of future performance. We outline the conceptual ambiguity and empirical flaws involved in current talent-related practices and propose three specific solutions to improve policy.
AB - The identification and development of talent have long been a central target of policy making in various domains, including education, sports, the arts and business. Given the importance of talent for success in a competitive global market, governments and businesses across the globe continually devise strategic policies to identify, attract and preserve both national and international talent. Most of these talent-related practices and policies (implicitly) assume that a person's talent is predetermined and fixed, that it is readily identifiable and that effective talent development requires early identification and specific, targeted training. However, these assumptions are problematically unsupported by recent empirical and conceptual scientific research. Instead, the research shows that talent development is dynamic and context-dependent, and that early identification is an unreliable predictor of future performance. We outline the conceptual ambiguity and empirical flaws involved in current talent-related practices and propose three specific solutions to improve policy.
KW - talent development
KW - talent identification
KW - skill
KW - policy
KW - ethics
U2 - 10.1111/1467-923X.13538
DO - 10.1111/1467-923X.13538
M3 - Article
SN - 0032-3179
JO - The Political Quarterly
JF - The Political Quarterly
ER -