Industry calls for summit with Government to save Apprenticeship Levy
|
· 95% of manufacturers
want changes to the Levy in some form
· Only 7% of companies
have had no challenges with the Levy
· Two in five companies
say colleges/training providers unable or unwilling to provide
Apprenticeships that manufacturers want
· 11% of companies looking
to start an engineering...Request free
trial
Britain’s manufacturers are calling for an urgent summit with Government to discuss fundamental reforms to make the Apprenticeship Levy work, and to ensure the creation of additional numbers of high value manufacturing and engineering Apprenticeships.
The call comes on the back of a survey by EEF, the manufacturers’ organisation showing overwhelming support for sweeping reforms to the operation of the Levy and the latest figures for overall Apprenticeship Starts showing a 31% fall in starts for January 2018 compared to the same period last year.
Making the call, EEF Head of Education & Skills Policy, Verity Davidge, said:
“Everyone shares the ambition of creating high quality Apprenticeships which are essential if industry is going to access the skills it will need in the future, especially in a post Brexit world where fewer skilled workers will come to the UK.
“But, whilst the Apprentice Levy had laudable aims its impact has been highly damaging for Employers and Apprentices, and what should have been a win-win situation has turned into a lose-lose. We have to address the alarming drop in starts initially and then look at positive solutions which are on the table to make the levy work for employers and learners in the long term.
“Government must now sit down with business and find a way to rescue the Levy so that it meets the original pledges made to companies when it was introduced.”
According to the survey just 5% of companies want to leave the levy as it is. The majority (52%) want to keep the Levy but see improvements made to current system and a quarter (26%) want the levy to turn into a training levy.
Furthermore, 8% of companies have cancelled or delayed engineering apprenticeships for a new recruit specifically because of the Levy while 11% of companies looking to start an engineering apprenticeship for an existing employee have cancelled or delayed it specifically because of the Levy.
The survey also backs criticism that the Levy was rushed in as over half of companies (54%) said Apprenticeship standards have not been ready for delivery, whilst two fifths of companies say colleges and training providers are either unable or unwilling to deliver the Apprenticeships that manufacturers want.
In response EEF is proposing the following reforms to make the Levy work:
EEF has a long-standing reputation as one of the UK’s leading experts in the field of Apprenticeship training. Over 1,000 Apprentices a year are trained for some of the UK’s biggest companies at its state of the art Technology Training Centre in Birmingham.
The survey covered 100 Levy Paying Manufacturers between 5th March and 13th April 2018 |
