, Labour’s Shadow Minister for Further Education
and Skills,responding to new figures
showing the Government’s apprenticeship incentive payment is
failing to create the promised opportunities, said:
“Young people are being let down by the Government’s
irresponsible handling of this crisis which has led to soaring
unemployment and the worst economic crisis of any major
economy.
“It is clear their apprenticeship incentive is failing,
having created just a third of the promised opportunities.
“Ministers have no plan to reverse the fall in apprentice
numbers, they should adopt Labour’s plan for a ‘Jobs Promise’ for
young people including using a structured wage subsidy to create
the apprenticeship opportunities young people need to gain
productive skills and long-term employment.”
Ends
Notes to editors
· In the Plan for Jobs announced in July 2020,
the Government announced a cash incentive of either £2,000 or
£1,500 for employers to take on a new apprentice until the end of
March 2020. At the March Budget this was increased to a flat
incentive payment of £3,000 and extended until July 2021.
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/966868/BUDGET_2021_-_web.pdf
· The Government budgeted for 100,000 hires
under the scheme: “Includes the indicative cost of 100,000
incentive payments for new apprenticeship hires."
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/a-plan-for-jobs-documents/a-plan-for-jobs-2020
· Just 34,810 apprenticeships had been started
under the incentive scheme by 3 March 2021
Additional analysis, table 2: Table showing the number of
planned starts on the apprenticeship incentive scheme by month
and level category as at 3 March 2021 https://explore-education-statistics.service.gov.uk/find-statistics/apprenticeships-and-traineeships/2020-21
· Apprentice starts have fallen 18.5 per cent
in Q2 2020/21 compared to the same period last year.
· Labour’s jobs promise would
guarantee young people out of education or work for six
months a training or job placement: https://labour.org.uk/press/labour-unveils-jobs-promise-plan-as-new-analysis-shows-potential-scale-of-unemployment-crisis/
· Under Labour’s proposed wage subsidy
employers would receive a full wage subsidy for a new
apprentices’ first three months, a 50 per cent wage subsidy for
six months and 25 per cent subsidy for the final three months.
This would mean half of a new young apprentices’ wages would be
paid by the Government, saving employers over £3,500 per
apprentice.
· This wage subsidy would be funded from the
over £300 million underspend from the apprenticeships levy and
could have created 85,000 jobs for young apprentices age 16 – 24
this year.