“Our inquiry has raised fundamental concerns that
apprenticeships and training programmes are not meeting the UK's
future skills needs. We also found that the lack of opportunities
for young people who do not go to university is of great
concern.”
Baroness , Chair of the House of
Lords Industry and Regulators Committee
Baroness , Chair of the House of
Lords Industry and Regulators Committee, has written to the Government
today (Wednesday 23 October) calling on it to ensure that
apprenticeships and training programmes meet the UK economy's
future skills needs.
In a letter to the Minister for
Skills, of Malvern, Baroness Taylor warns
that the current skills system is complex, short-term and lacks
strategic direction. The letter also highlights widespread
dissatisfaction with the Apprenticeship Levy, soon to become the
Growth and Skills Levy, raising concerns that it is
disadvantaging young people.
During its inquiry into the UK's skills needs for the future, the
Committee heard evidence from former Ministers and Government
advisers, skills institutions, and representatives of businesses,
Local Enterprise Partnerships, colleges, training providers,
apprentices, and trade unions.
The Committee also found that:
- apprenticeships have increasingly become a means of training
workers of all ages and funding the training of existing staff,
reducing opportunities for younger people and those moving to new
industries;
- some apprenticeships are overly academic for learners and
bureaucratic for employers and providers;
- effective devolution adds value to the skills system through
linking local employers and educators, but there is a need to
avoid reinventing Whitehall locally through new processes and
separate programmes;
- the UK is behind other countries in having a nationwide
culture of employer led training with employers fearing
investment in training due to the risk of losing staff to other
employers;
- proposals for a youth guarantee of access to education,
apprenticeships or training are ambitious. There is as yet,
little detail on what they will involve or who will be
responsible for delivering them.
It is therefore calling on the government to:
- develop a simpler skills system through its strategy for
post-16 education, with greater long-term funding for a smaller
number of priorities and programmes;
- ring-fence a substantial proportion of Growth and Skills Levy
funding for young people, new starters, or lower levels of
qualifications;
- review current apprenticeship content criteria, including
functional skills requirements, which can be restrictive;
- use the establishment of Skills England to provide a greater
focal point for the skills system;
- ensure local institutions have the resources to enable local
work, health and skills plans to be a success;
- introduce financial incentives for employers to invest in
training, for instance through a skills tax credit;
- ensure further education is funded sufficiently to deliver a
youth guarantee, including considering a greater level of
demand-led funding.
Baroness said:
“Our inquiry has raised fundamental concerns that apprenticeships
and training programmes are not meeting the UK's future skills
needs. We also found that the lack of opportunities for young
people who do not go to university is of great concern.
We look forward to seeing the Government's future policy plans in
this area and invite them to take our findings and
recommendations on board as they flesh out their initial
proposals.”