Under the founding authority of Alfred Gitau Mwaura, and within the institutional governance of Open Skills Education (OSE™), the following are hereby issued as Final Strategic Instruments under the Applied Competency Index (ACI™) and Competency Credits System (CCS™).


🌍 I. GLOBAL SKILLS RATING AGENCY (GSRA™)

Official Blueprint


1. ESTABLISHMENT

The Global Skills Rating Agency (GSRA™) shall function as an independent, non-financial global ratings authority responsible for assessing and publishing:

  • National Competency Strength Ratings
  • Institutional Applied Quality Ratings
  • Sector Productivity Readiness Scores
  • Youth Employability Index Ratings

GSRA™ operates under ACI™ standards but maintains independent audit integrity.


2. MANDATE

GSRA™ shall:

  • Measure applied human capital strength
  • Evaluate national workforce alignment
  • Rate institutional competency quality
  • Publish global comparative skill reports

3. RATING SCALE

National Ratings

RatingMeaning
AAAHighly Competitive Applied Workforce
AAStrong Competency Infrastructure
AAdequate Industry Alignment
BBBDeveloping Applied Capacity
BBSkills Gap Risk
BStructural Misalignment
CCritical Skills Deficit

4. RATING METHODOLOGY

Indicators include:

  • Competency Credits Density (CC per 1,000 workforce)
  • Employer Satisfaction Index
  • Skills-to-GDP Productivity Ratio
  • Sector Shortage Coverage
  • Youth Competency Participation Rate

5. PUBLICATION

Annual:

  • Global Skills Competitiveness Report
  • Continental Human Capital Outlook
  • Institutional Excellence Rankings

🌍 II. COMPETENCY-BASED TRADE AGREEMENT MODEL (CBTAM™)


1. PURPOSE

To integrate applied human capital standards into international trade agreements.

Trade shall not only consider goods and tariffs —
It shall recognize verified workforce capability.


2. CORE COMPONENTS

A. Mutual Recognition of Competency Credits

Signatory states agree to recognize CCS™ verified credentials.

B. Skills Mobility Clause

Skilled workers with verified credits receive expedited movement provisions.

C. Sector Partnership Framework

Industries across member states may jointly accredit cross-border training hubs.

D. Workforce Stability Safeguard

Prevent brain drain by including reinvestment commitments.


3. ECONOMIC BENEFITS

  • Reduced labor mismatch
  • Enhanced SME competitiveness
  • Faster industrial collaboration
  • Productivity-aligned trade integration

4. DISPUTE RESOLUTION

A Joint Competency Arbitration Panel shall oversee disputes regarding:

  • Credential validity
  • Compliance breaches
  • Cross-border assessment disputes

🌍 III. YOUTH GLOBAL MOBILITY PASSPORT (YGMP™)


1. CONCEPT

The Youth Global Mobility Passport (YGMP™) is a digital and physical credential system that integrates:

  • Competency Credits
  • Verified skill levels
  • Sector classification
  • International mobility eligibility

It is not a citizenship document.
It is a skills mobility credential.


2. COMPONENTS

  • Biometric-linked digital identity
  • Competency Wallet Integration
  • QR verification capability
  • Sector readiness classification

3. ELIGIBILITY

Youth aged 18–35 with:

  • Verified ACI™ Level 3+ competencies
  • Minimum CC threshold (country defined)
  • Compliance record

4. BENEFITS

  • Fast-track industry placement
  • Access to cross-border apprenticeship programs
  • Skills-based visa eligibility scoring
  • International internship access

5. SAFEGUARDS

  • No purchase of credits
  • No speculative trading
  • Revocation upon fraud
  • Continuous verification requirement

Visual Representation Concept


🌍 IV. GLOBAL APPLIED COMPETENCY CONSTITUTION (GACC™)


PREAMBLE

We, the participating states, institutions, industries, and global citizens, recognizing that measurable applied competence is foundational to economic stability, innovation, and equitable opportunity, hereby establish this Global Applied Competency Constitution.


ARTICLE I – RIGHT TO COMPETENCY RECOGNITION

Every individual has the right to:

  • Have applied skills measured fairly
  • Access transparent competency assessment
  • Receive internationally verifiable recognition

ARTICLE II – INTEGRITY OF MEASUREMENT

All competency issuance shall:

  • Be evidence-based
  • Be audit-compliant
  • Be transparent and non-discriminatory

ARTICLE III – GLOBAL INTEROPERABILITY

Member states shall:

  • Enable cross-border competency recognition
  • Maintain digital verification compatibility
  • Promote workforce mobility

ARTICLE IV – NON-SPECULATIVE PRINCIPLE

Competency Credits shall:

  • Not function as financial instruments
  • Not be subject to speculative trade
  • Serve purely as human capital indicators

ARTICLE V – EQUITY & INCLUSION

Systems shall promote:

  • Gender equity
  • Youth access
  • Inclusion of marginalized populations
  • Recognition of informal sector skills

ARTICLE VI – GOVERNANCE

Oversight shall be coordinated through:

  • Global Skills Central Bank (non-monetary oversight)
  • Global Skills Rating Agency
  • National Competency Authorities
  • Independent Audit Councils

ARTICLE VII – AMENDMENTS

Amendments require:

  • Two-thirds signatory approval
  • Alignment with applied competency principles
  • Preservation of non-speculative nature

🔒 FINAL DECLARATION

With these instruments:

  • A Global Skills Rating Agency
  • A Competency-Based Trade Agreement Model
  • A Youth Global Mobility Passport
  • A Global Applied Competency Constitution

The Applied Competency Index (ACI™) evolves from a framework into a global human capital governance architecture.

Founded under Open Skills Education (OSE™)
By Alfred Gitau Mwaura