Sectors - Civil

CITB say: ‘Invest to Save Skills’



According to the CITB, Government investment is needed to support skills in the coming year to prevent a generation of talent being lost.

The CITB Construction Skills Network (CSN) report for 2021-25 outlines three scenarios for how the construction sector could recover from the current recession. Under a best-case scenario, UK Gross Domestic Product (GDP) would return to pre-COVID-19 levels in 2022, whereas it is likely to be 2025 or later for the mid-case or worst case.

The forecast fall in construction employment varies between 10% and 14% of the workforce, or 286,000-372,000 sector workers. The numbers employed will only approach pre-COVID levels from 2025 onward.

Action is needed to ensure that this loss of skilled workers doesn’t hold the industry back from delivering on its pipeline of work, meeting the Government’s ambitions for infrastructure, new homes and zero carbon or modernising to boost productivity.

The CITB is working together with industry leaders to make it easier for people to join construction, to  place people who may have lost their job due to the pandemic, to help learners complete their apprenticeships and to carry out essential training as well as retaining.

The report makes four key recommendations for the Government to build on this. They are:

  1. Protect and retrain as much of construction’s existing talent as possible
  2. Make construction a priority sector in the new National Skills Fund
  3. Reform the Apprenticeship Levy so that more money can be spent on smaller companies in the supply chain
  4. Help get more college students into construction jobs and apprenticeships.

Steve Radley, CITB Policy Director, said: “This forecast shows that a recovery will be slower than previously hoped but that construction will grow and create more jobs over the next five years. This will create skills challenges and it is vital that CITB, industry and government work together to meet them.

“CITB is investing levy funds to make it easier for people to join construction, to place people who have lost their jobs, to help learners complete their apprenticeships and to carry out essential training and retraining.

“Government can play a key role and providing certainty on its infrastructure pipeline, working with industry to help more college students into construction jobs and apprenticeship and prioritising construction in the new National Skills Fund to help it recruit and train fresh talent. It should also look at reforming the Apprenticeship Levy to allow employers to pass on unspent vouchers in bulk.”

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