Apprentices: Financial Support 9.30 am Kelvin Hopkins (Luton
North) (Lab) I beg to move, That this House has
considered financial support for apprentices. It is a great
pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Ryan, and to
introduce this important debate about apprenticeships and funding
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Apprentices: Financial Support
9.30 am
-
(Luton North)
(Lab)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered financial support for
apprentices.
It is a great pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms
Ryan, and to introduce this important debate about
apprenticeships and funding for apprentices.
Well-trained and highly skilled workers are vital for our
economy, and for too long the apprenticeship route has been
neglected. For years—decades even—apprenticeships and
apprentices have been underfunded and poorly paid. That
must change if we are to provide our economy with the
skills that it needs and young workers with the
opportunities and rewards that they deserve.
The Government have made some moves to boost
apprenticeships, but those are too little and inadequate.
Not only are apprenticeships under-resourced, but
businesses, those with sector skills, universities and
colleges have raised real questions about the potential
quality of the new apprenticeships. Young people will be
doubly disincentivised if both the incomes that they
receive and the quality of their courses and experience are
not sufficient.
The Government have set an arbitrary target of 3 million
apprenticeship starts by 2020 and have introduced a 0.5%
apprenticeship levy for any company with a payroll of more
than £3 million a year. There has seemingly been little
focus on the quality or content of those apprenticeships,
potentially leaving young people without the high-calibre
skills that they should be able to expect.
I have personally been concerned about the skills deficit
in British industry since the 1980s and wrote much about
the problem in those days. Research in the 1980s and 1990s
by the National Institute of Economic and Social Research,
led by Professor Sig Prais and others, drew comparisons
with workers in continental Europe, notably Germany, and
found Britain wanting. Maths skills were especially poor in
Britain, and that remains a problem today.
In more recent times, the proprietor of an engineering
company in Bedfordshire—my own county—has complained that
he cannot find the employees he needs, despite repeatedly
advertising. A motor industry supply chain manufacturer in
my constituency could not find a single toolmaker in a town
that used to be dominated by manufacturing, which employed
many tens of thousands. We need to do better across all
fields, not just in manufacturing.
Some comparisons are especially significant. Research by
the National Union of Students and The Times Educational
Supplement suggests that, in contrast to the benefits and
finances available to higher education students,
apprentices are being hung out to dry and treated like
“second-class citizens”. Some apprentices earn as little as
£3.40 an hour. They are also excluded from a number of
means of support available to their counterparts studying
in further education institutions.
-
(Upper Bann)
(DUP)
One issue that we face in Northern Ireland on
apprenticeships is that 20 young people might start a
course, but less than one third will finish it, whether
they be electricians, joiners or plumbers. In the hon.
Gentleman’s opinion, is that down purely to finances, or do
we have to find another way of incentivising young people
to finish their courses?
-
I thank the hon. Gentleman for his intervention. I will
touch on the issue of drop-outs later, but he is right that
finances are a significant problem.
The research shows that a college student with one child
could be eligible for more than £10,000 a year in financial
support, and the families of such students could receive
thousands more, but apprentices, including those on the
minimum wage, earning as little as £7,000 a year, are not
entitled to any of that. The Department for Work and
Pensions does not class apprenticeships as “approved
education and training”, and that affects the benefits that
apprentices can receive. Specifically, when a young person
takes up an apprenticeship, their family will become
ineligible to claim child benefit and child tax credit.
Further education students between the ages of 16 and 19
could be eligible for either a £1,200 a year vulnerable
student bursary or a discretionary bursary. No bursaries
are available for apprentices.
In many areas, students enjoy concessionary or discounted
travel to college or university. For apprentices, there are
some discounts, but only for the first 12 months of an
apprenticeship and only for those apprenticeships leading
to a serious qualification.
-
(Central Suffolk and
North Ipswich) (Con)
I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on securing the debate.
He will be aware that, in the east of England, many
apprentices work in farming or in the land economy and
often have to travel long distances to work and to the
agricultural colleges that provide some of the additional
training for apprenticeships. Does he agree that that group
might be deterred by the additional travel costs, because
the car is the only option for those apprentices?
-
I thank the hon. Gentleman for his intervention; that is
the point I am making. According to the NUS, the average
apprentice spends £24 a week on travel.
Parents of students are eligible for child benefit of up to
£1,066 a year for the oldest child, but parents of
apprentices are not eligible for child benefit. Parents of
students are also eligible for child tax credit of £2,750 a
year and up to £3,324.90 a year for the first child under
universal credit. Parents of apprentices are not eligible
for either child tax credit or universal credit for them.
Care to learn grants are available to student parents but
not apprentice parents. Those amount to £160 per child per
week. Students are often offered bank accounts with such
benefits as an interest-free overdraft; those are not
available to apprentices. Finally, students are entitled to
either a full exemption from, or a discounted rate of,
council tax. That is available only to some very low-paid
apprentices taking a course leading to a recognised
qualification.
One effect of the travel costs is that some young people do
apprenticeships that involve shorter travelling distances,
in preference to the apprenticeships that they really
wanted to do. With all the comparative financial
disadvantages, it must be the case that some young people
for whom an apprenticeship might be appropriate and the
best route to qualifications and skilled employment are
persuaded to take other courses of study, as students
rather than apprentices. There may even be pressure from
their families to do so. That is more likely in less
affluent families.
Then there is the question of diversity. The Learning and
Work Institute points out that people from black, Asian and
minority ethnic backgrounds are half as likely as other
young people to secure access to apprenticeships. Women,
too, are more likely to be apprentices in low-paid sectors,
entrenching the gender pay gap, and young people eligible
for free school meals are up to half as likely to undertake
advanced apprenticeships. Those significant equality issues
must be addressed. There is also a regional dimension: 40%
of the firms that will pay the apprenticeship levy are
based in London and the south-east.
Colleges play a major part both in educating young people
and in supporting apprentices, but the Association of
Colleges is concerned that the Government’s 3 million
target could drive quantity over quality, and the
Government’s existing approach to financial support means
that many young people from disadvantaged backgrounds face
barriers to accessing apprenticeships, with a key reason
for students dropping out being the lack of financial
assistance.
I have laid out some of the significant problems holding
back apprenticeships, most of which are financial. I could
spend much longer dwelling on some of the other
disadvantages, but other hon. Members will wish to add to
what I have said, so I shall soon conclude. The Opposition
sought to make changes to the Technical and Further
Education Bill in Committee and on Report, and I had the
pleasure of serving on the Committee and making a
contribution there, too. However, it is now in the
Government’s hands to address all the problems, to make
better financial provision for apprenticeships, to better
fund our colleges and to incentivise employers to sustain
apprentices and apprenticeships. That is vital for our
young people and vital for our economy, and I ask the
Minister to respond positively to what I have said.
9.39 am
-
(Motherwell and
Wishaw) (SNP)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Ryan.
I congratulate the hon. Member for Luton North (Kelvin
Hopkins) on securing the debate.
I want to put a kilt on this debate, as everyone in this
room would expect me to do, and in Scotland there is a good
story to be told, but before I do that I will talk about my
visit yesterday, as part of the Select Committee on
Education, to Gateshead College. I was absolutely
enthralled. It was like coming home for me, as a former
further education lecturer, to see the commitment and
enthusiasm in that well known and highly regarded college,
and to see what it is doing with apprentices. It was very
positive and I saw an example of a new type of
apprenticeship—the PlanBEE—where apprentices are taken on
at a much higher level and work within different companies
in the north-east, gaining absolutely wonderful training
that can eventually lead to a degree. The hon. Gentleman
talked about funding; those are the types of course that
also need to be funded to the maximum.
As some of my late preparation for this debate, I looked at
the rates in Scotland and at what the Scottish Government
have been doing. Scotland has led the way in many regards,
because it has had modern apprentices for years, but the UK
Government bringing in the apprenticeship levy and changing
the law here has had a subsequent effect in Scotland. The
Scottish Government consulted with employers across
Scotland to see how they might best deal with the
additional funding, so they set up a special skills fund.
The distances in Scotland tend not to be so large in some
cases, but are extremely hard in others. It is very
difficult for some apprentices in the north of Scotland to
secure work, but there is a real drive by the Scottish
Government to look at how best that can be localised and
help be given.
-
The hon. Lady is on a roll about Scotland. In Northern
Ireland, the Government have new incentives for
apprenticeships and there is now a closer working
relationship between the business and education and
apprenticeship sectors to tailor courses to suit industry,
and to make sure we get apprentices for the jobs.
-
To that end, a lot of money from the Scottish Government is
going to local colleges that are mandated to work with
local employers. As I said, I have previous experience of
this area. Now the focus has moved from being on when a
large company goes bust and people need retraining, to
getting business owners and companies in and saying, “What
is it that you need?” and then planning courses around
that.
-
It is not for me to praise the Scottish National party or
the Scottish Government, but is it possible that the
British Government serving England and Wales could learn
something from Scotland?
-
Of course I agree with that. In this case, there is a lot
to be learnt because of the positive way forward and how
the Scottish Government understand and realise the
necessity of training a highly skilled workforce to move us
forward with lots of economic opportunity. We have a
different agenda—I will not go into that now—but it is
important for economic growth that every country looks at
how it best trains and prepares.
As a former further education lecturer, I understand only
too well the difficulties young people have when they are
in any kind of education, and how important it is that they
are properly resourced. It is also true in Scotland that
apprentices do not fare quite as well as others. Although
the rates are higher, they have the same issues and do not
qualify for some things—again, that is a DWP issue to do
with child benefit and so on. I would like the Minister to
look at that because it is important.
I am the product of an academic route, as are many people
in this room. I know the academic route does not suit
everyone, and even if someone goes down the academic route,
it does not always guarantee them a job. In Scotland we
have the graduate apprenticeship scheme, which is proving
really useful because it gives people real, hands-on
experience and makes them much more employable. The whole
idea of apprentices being cheap labour, serving their time
and then being paid off has to end.
-
I thank the hon. Lady for giving way again and apologise
for interrupting her speech. Like her, I used to teach in
further education and one of the problems that occurred was
young people being pressurised by parents to stay in
inappropriate education courses because it was financially
advantageous for them to do so. Such students were not only
in the wrong courses, but unhappy in the courses and
sometimes disruptive in class because they were not meant
to be there. Wil the hon. Lady comment on that problem?
-
I also have experience of that. For funding, the students
had to be kept in colleges, but I used to do a lot of
student counselling and I would counsel them to finish the
course, even if they did not like or enjoy it, so that they
could then move on to other employment and say, “Look, I
hated this. I absolutely hated it, but I got there.” That
shows proof of purpose and the fact that they can learn.
It is vital that across the UK we look at apprenticeships
in a totally different light. This goes back to what I said
earlier. Apprenticeships should not be cheap labour, but
should be seen as a progressive and forward-looking thing
for parents to consider. From my experience on the
Education Committee, I know that there is often a real
dearth of good careers advice for young people in schools;
students are channelled into the academic route and schools
want to promote that, and there is not enough good careers
advice to show that some young people, especially those who
are less academic, would benefit from a career starting at
16, 17 or 18.
Some of the young people I spoke to yesterday were highly
qualified and had very good A-levels, but their peers and
some of their families were horrified that they had not
gone to university. They had chosen that route within the
building and architecture sectors; it is an interesting and
wide-ranging course, and those young people saw it as what
they wanted to do. We need more of that across the UK.
When I studied to be a further education lecturer, I did a
comparative education course. I looked at Germany, which
the hon. Gentleman referred to, where there is true parity
of esteem between the academic and non-academic routes, and
that is reflected in the funding as well. We really need to
promote that view across the entire UK. Apprenticeship is
not a second chance or second choice, but is something we
should actively encourage our young people to do because it
will lead to good, well paying jobs that benefit the
economy.
-
Another issue that is raised from time to time in Northern
Ireland is apprentices being sponsored by companies to go
into training colleges. With the economic crisis that we
have had for a number of years, it has been very difficult
for young people to do that. Is there another mechanism we
could look at to encourage people to do that, rather than
that route being solely based on sponsorship?
-
That is an absolutely crucial point and we do need some
form of Government funding for it. Scotland still has
education maintenance allowance for people going into
college, but not for apprentices on day release. It still
believes in funding, and our students do not pay fees. This
is almost a case of chicken and egg—if there is not a
thriving economy, it is more difficult. Government have to
show business and industry how important it is that we
carry forward a skills agenda that benefits everyone, but
does not do it on the cheap as far as apprentices are
concerned.
-
(Belfast East)
(DUP)
The hon. Lady is very generous in giving of her time. When
I was the Lord Mayor of Belfast, I recognised that there
was a deficit in apprenticeship opportunities. As a
council, we went forward with 400 apprenticeship places.
The local authorities in Northern Ireland are small, but we
led the way. When we asked other anchor institutions in the
public sector in Belfast to do the same, the largest came
back and offered £500 to the scheme. There is a failure to
recognise the opportunity and the benefit for the public
sector, Government Departments, local authorities and here
in Parliament of offering apprenticeships. Does the hon.
Lady have a view on that?
-
Yes. Some of the things to do with the apprenticeship levy
have affected local authorities in Scotland, as funding is
not done in the same way any more. My local authority works
closely with and gets a large sum of money from the
Scottish Government to make sure that young people
especially find work, which often happens through
apprenticeships.
In Scotland, we have had modern apprenticeships for a
number of years. They are linked to the Scottish
qualifications framework, and apprentices are put on to all
the different levels within that. I have known young modern
apprentices who started as admin staff in a college and
moved right through it, ending up later with part-time
degrees. We should look at that.
The synchronicity between college and practical courses,
and articulation later to universities, was raised
yesterday. I know that I am going slightly off subject, but
all that has to be funded. The root of the matter is that
apprenticeships have to be seen as of equal value to
academic courses. Students and parents can claim a number
of benefits at present, and apprentices and their families
should also be entitled to the same amount of money. I know
that might be controversial but I think it is the way
forward.
I will leave my remarks at that, because this is not
necessarily my area of expertise, but it is really
important that people move this agenda forward.
9.51 am
-
(Blackpool South)
(Lab)
It is a great pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms
Ryan, and to speak in this debate in the middle of National
Apprenticeship Week. I begin by paying warm tribute to my
hon. Friend the Member for Luton North (Kelvin Hopkins) and
congratulating him on securing the debate. He has modestly
mentioned before, and again today, his experience in this
area. Colleagues who served with him on the Public Bill
Committee for the Technical and Further Education Bill—new
colleagues in particular— will have recognised his breadth,
depth and wealth of experience in this area, having been an
FE tutor, a governor, and a chair of the all-party group on
further education and lifelong learning. Latterly, as the
Minister and I know, his contributions in that Bill
Committee were excellent.
I am delighted to take part in the debate. This week is an
opportunity for all MPs, regardless of party, to celebrate
the tens of thousands of individual successes—from young
beginners to older workers acquiring new skills, and the
successes of the colleges, training providers and employers
who inspire them. I was privileged to speak yesterday at
the celebration of apprenticeships conference, which was
organised by Lindsay McCurdy and her team from
Apprenticeships 4 England to pay tribute to the huge number
of talented and hard-working apprentices up and down the
country.
-
I thank my hon. Friend for his kind words. When
apprenticeships are successful, many apprentices go on to
have highly skilled jobs, overtaking even those who have
been to university, including graduates, and they are ahead
both in promotions and earnings by the time university
students get started.
-
My hon. Friend makes an excellent point, which could
reverberate usefully around the Chambers of this place
thanks to individual MPs and Ministers—I know that the
Minister who is here today talks about that frequently.
Those who pursue that route of learning while they are
earning, to use that phrase, can be enormously successful.
As Members know—including those of us who have sat on
Select Committees, where we listen to hours and hours of
discussion, debate and evidence—sometimes little things
stick with us. I remember something well that happened 10
years ago, although the illustration is still relevant. I
worked on a Select Committee inquiry comparing
apprenticeships with higher education. We heard from a
young man who worked at BAE Systems. He was not my
constituent but came from a neighbouring constituency. I
will not mention his school—it was outside Preston—but he
said, “When I was at my secondary school, most of my mates
ended up going to university and I did not feel that I
either could or would. They used to say that I was a bit of
thicko, but I got this apprenticeship with BAE Systems.” He
spoke about where he was in the process, and of course BAE
Systems supported him through his degree. He also said, “I
will have the last laugh on them, because I will come out
with a very skilled job and a degree, and no student debt.”
Today is not the day for me to engage in discussing
spiralling student debt, least of all with a Minister who
is not responsible for it, but that point is important. The
more that the costs of higher education rise, the more
important it is to get the message across to people that it
is not a question of having apprenticeships or higher
education. The two can dovetail together extremely well,
but to do so, they need the financial support and
encouragement that we are debating today.
I was very happy to speak at the celebration of
apprenticeships conference. On Monday I also met people
from the motor industry, which has been effective and
successful in this regard. We talked about the sector
skills council that is associated with it—the Institute of
the Motor Industry—and the Society of Motor Manufacturers
and Traders. The industry has been very successful in
supporting Government programmes such as the apprenticeship
trailblazers, and in giving apprentices support—sometimes
financial support and sometimes information, advice and
guidance. There are some very bright sparks in a number of
different sectors.
-
My hon. Friend mentions the motor industry. Vauxhall is a
leader in that industry, and I know Vauxhall well, being
from Luton. In recent years it has encouraged young people
from local schools and colleges to tour the factory to see
what life is like in manufacturing, and it has recruited
new apprentices. Vauxhall found that its workforce was
ageing, but now it is getting younger again, because it is
taking in many more young apprentices and is showing the
way forward for positive companies. If other companies were
as positive as Vauxhall, we might do rather better.
-
My hon. Friend makes an excellent point. It is about the
process involved, and I will talk later about the barriers
to doing that sort of thing that young people experience in
schools, for instance. It is important that various sectors
act.
I have talked about the importance of the motor industry,
but there is also the service industry. That raises
questions not only about support, but about the many
opportunities available. I mentioned Apprenticeships 4
England and Lindsay McCurdy. Last year she brought a great
bunch of apprentices, including a talented group of young
apprentice hairdressers from Michaeljohn Training in
Manchester, to a meeting that I sponsored in one of the
Select Committee rooms. As an apprenticeship week present,
they presented me with a very lifelike model head—I still
have it on my office shelf—to demonstrate their skills in
colouring and styling. One of these days, if I am feeling
mischievous, I suppose I might ginger up the occasional
official or other policy maker who seems to think that the
route to successful jobs and apprenticeships is simply
through higher-level manufacturing, digital or technical
areas. The truth is that if we are to achieve the 3 million
target, which the Minister and his colleagues are so keen
to hit, and really expand the opportunities for young
people, we will need the service sectors just as much as we
need manufacturing and other sectors.
Oppositions do not get much opportunity to blow their own
trumpet about success stories, so I shall. I am very proud
of the fact that the last Labour Government introduced the
National Apprenticeship Service and, indeed, National
Apprenticeship Week in 2008. They also revived
apprenticeships, taking them from 65,000 starts in 1996-97
to 279,700 by 2009-10. Those increases have continued under
successive Governments.
The last Labour Government also linked the creation of
apprenticeship placements to public sector contracts across
a range of Departments and projects, including Crossrail.
Such infrastructure projects will remain a crucial conduit
for apprenticeship expansion, as I have said. As well as
financial support, informal encouragement is extremely
important for widening the diversity of the apprentices who
take part in those great projects. I was fortunate enough
to see that two years ago when I went down the construction
tunnel at Farringdon and saw some of the people working on
it. They were young Londoners, including a couple of young
women and a young man from a BME community who had started
off selling ad space and was now proud of his tunnelling
qualifications. It is worth remembering that 60% of the
construction work on Crossrail is outside London, so there
is a lot of scope in the supply chain for many more
opportunities for young people. Projects such as Crossrail
and its commitment need to become a vital part of our
regeneration and productivity across the UK.
-
(Bristol South)
(Lab)
My hon. Friend makes an excellent point. Closer to home, I
was able to visit the cellars of this very place to see the
amount of work that is needed on the restoration and
renewal project for Parliament. A great range of people
across the country contributed to building this great
building. There are immense opportunities for apprentices
to be involved in the restoration project across the
country and learn new skills that we have lost. That needs
to be a key part of the project.
-
My hon. Friend makes an excellent and highly relevant
comment. I remember having the same experience many years
ago when I served on the Advisory Committee on Works of
Art, looking into the repair of stuff in this place. The
project is important because a lot of bespoke skills will
be needed, not least those relating to architecture. There
are some very challenging issues—logistics, wiring and God
knows what else—that will potentially engage a whole gamut
of people.
That is what it is all about; it is about economic impact,
but it is also about improving the careers and life chances
of hundreds of thousands of young people—and, indeed, older
people. We talk a lot about apprenticeships, but we have
not always talked enough about apprentices and their
individual issues and challenges. The need to increase the
focus on improving access and social mobility, which I know
the Minister feels strongly about, as I do, is a crucial
part of the equation.
My hon. Friend the Member for Luton North has already
referred to the Government’s continuing failure to address
or understand apprenticeships. The fact that the Department
for Work and Pensions does not class apprenticeships as
approved education or training is leaving many individuals
and families thousands of pounds worse off. I pay tribute
to a survey that appeared in The Times Educational
Supplement on 10 February under the headline “Apprentices
‘treated like second-class citizens’”. It that was carried
out by the National Union of Students, via the National
Society of Apprenticeships, which it sponsors.
My hon. Friend read an important but slightly dispiriting
list of the ways in which apprentices are financially
disadvantaged in comparison with students. If the
Government hope to reduce the growing skills gap in this
country with a push to create 3 million apprenticeships,
why are apprentices and apprenticeships not included as
approved education or training? There has been spirited
discussion about that in the House of Lords recently, which
I will come on to shortly. The Government need to make
progress on this.
The Times Educational Supplement article states:
“Research by the NUS and TES has revealed that…some
apprentices earn as little as £3.40 an hour”.
That figure will rise to £3.50 in April. There is a
separate issue, which we probably do not have time to
discuss in detail today, about how many more employers
could go the extra mile, over and above the existing rate.
That rate can sometimes be particularly difficult for
younger apprentices to exist on, given their personal
family circumstances.
-
I hope my hon. Friend does not mind my interrupting his
flow. He talks about companies; one of the problems with
companies, particularly small companies, is that they
sometimes have short lifespans and then apprentices are
lost. The great advantage of big projects such as
Crossrail—which I, too, have visited and been impressed
by—is that they give long-term certainty to apprentices,
who spend a long time doing a job and then come out with a
lot of experience and with high skills that set them up for
the future. We have to try to focus apprenticeships on
those areas in particular, so that apprentices do not lose
out and suddenly find themselves unemployed and having to
get a job without skills.
-
I hear what my hon. Friend says. He is absolutely right
about the contribution that larger employers and large
long-term projects can make. However, we are all products
of our individual constituency circumstances and
experiences. My experience as a Member of Parliament in
Blackpool is that, although a lot of people go and work for
large organisations outside Blackpool, such as BAE Systems,
there are also a huge number of very small businesses and
microbusinesses. In my experience, if we can engage small
and medium-sized employers, particularly in areas where
there is a close-knit SME community—there are obstacles to
doing so, such as hiding the wiring for them and ensuring
that there is back-office support, but they are outwith the
debate—those SMEs are sometimes the best advocates for
other colleagues and small businesses taking them on board.
I think it is about both, not either/or, but my hon. Friend
is absolutely right to point out the importance of the
support that can be given by those organisations and the
supply chains that contribute to them.
The article about NUS research states:
“Disadvantaged apprentices are missing out on thousands of
pounds in support available to students”.
The National Society of Apprentices took up that point in
its written evidence to the Technical and Further Education
Bill, which stated that
“upon taking up an apprenticeship, a young person’s family
will become ineligible to claim child benefit and child tax
credits. This will inevitably have a negative impact on
that family’s household budget, which is not covered by the
earnings made by an apprentice’s salary given the
apprentice minimum wage is barely over £3 per hour”,
as it was at the time.
Shakira Martin, the extremely active and feisty—I say that
with approval—NUS vice-president for further education, has
elaborated on that point. The article quotes her as saying
that
“the idea that apprenticeships were a desirable way to
‘earn while you learn’ was ‘far from the truth’”.
She said:
“Apprentices are treated like second-class citizens, as
workers and as learners. Financial support like Care to
Learn [for apprentice parents], and Child Tax Credits for
parents of apprentices, is not available…If apprenticeships
are going to be the silver bullet to create a high-skilled
economy for the future, the government has to…support
apprentices financially to succeed.”
Otherwise, we will fail to capitalise on the benefit of
expansion.
In the update that it circulated to Members today before
the debate, the NUS elaborated on that point: “Apprentices
are not necessarily eligible for council tax exemptions in
the same way as other students. While those paid under £195
a week are exempt, many are unaware of this. Often councils
do not advertise this discount on their website, and we are
increasingly becoming aware of apprentices being wrongly
charged council tax. Additionally, one of the implications
of the apprenticeship reforms is that fewer apprentices
will be eligible for this discount, not because they are
being paid more, but rather”—this is a really important
point that I would like the Minister to grasp—“because
apprenticeships are no longer required to include a
qualification which is necessary for the exemption.
Apprentices earning over this amount are obliged to pay
council tax.”
I referred earlier to the fact I had spoken at an event on
Monday organised by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and
Traders, the Sector Skills Council for Science, Engineering
and Manufacturing Technologies, and the Institute of the
Motor Industry. That event was preceded by a seminar in
which there was discussion of all aspects of the
apprenticeship levy, the introduction of the Institute for
Apprenticeships and so on. One thing that came out, both in
informal conversations and in the speeches that were made
at that event, was how worried and concerned a body of
employers remain about the issue of qualifications not
being properly included, from their perspective, in the new
standards that have come out of the skills plan and the
Sainsbury review. That is a vexed issue, and I would not
expect the Minister to want to dilate in detail on it
today, but if he has not heard about it already from people
in the industry, I am sure that he will hear about it
presently.
I do not want to go on too long about this particular
aspect, but it is crucial. I refer again to the debate held
in the Lords on 27 February as part of the proceedings in
Grand Committee on the Technical and Further Education
Bill. My colleague, ,
pressed the Government on this issue and tabled an
amendment. , the
Front-Bench spokesperson who spoke on behalf of the
Minister in the other place, said that some of the issues
that had been raised were outwith the scope of the
Department for Education. She was right; they are, because
they are Department for Work and Pensions issues, and
indeed the issues around council tax are for the Department
for Communities and Local Government. Of course, that does
not stop Ministers in either House having discussions with
their colleagues in other Departments.
also said that
she could not change the definition of apprentices. As one
or two Members of the Lords asked, if the Government cannot
change it, who can? Perhaps the Minister could change it.
If he cannot do so, or does not feel that it his role to do
so, powers could be given to the Institute for
Apprenticeships so that it could change the definition,
either by an amendment in the Lords, or in the Commons if
any amendments come back from the Lords for us to discuss
further on the Floor of the House. Or, I would argue, that
could be done by delegated legislation. I will leave it at
that, but I would like the Minister to consider some of
those issues, because they are quite significant.
The Association of Colleges is also concerned about the
discrepancy between the current national minimum hourly
wage rates of £7.20 for those aged 25 and over and only
£3.40 an hour for apprentices. Someone aged 22 in the first
year of an apprenticeship is entitled only to that
apprenticeship rate, whereas in any other area they would
be entitled to the minimum hourly rate of £6.95 for 21 to
24-year-olds. That is a disincentive, which is an issue we
really need to take on board. I think the Minister and I
share common ground on this, but I believe that attracting
more 19 to 24-year-olds into apprenticeships is extremely
important, because many of them have life skills that 16 to
19-year-olds do not possess. However, many of them have had
difficult circumstances that have meant they have not been
potential apprentices. If they come from that sort of
background, the financial disincentive—the disparity that I
have set out—is really significant.
The National Society of Apprentices has said that the
existence of a low apprenticeship national minimum wage is
unnecessary and complicated for both apprentice and
employer. It says that it is possible for someone to be on
three different minimum rates during a four-year
apprenticeship. That increases the risk of accidental
underpayment of apprentices—that is a concern for
employers—and apprentices have said that it demeans the
value of the work that they contribute.
The Minister will be relieved to know that I am coming to
the end of my section on finance issues. Of course, this is
a good day to discuss finance, because we have the Budget
coming up later. There may be nothing in the Budget about
these issues—I am not expecting a last-minute conversion
between now and half-past 1—but in all seriousness, they
will continue to concern people, and I hope that he, his
colleagues and indeed all of us will continue to press the
Treasury hard on them.
As I said, the Government have talked about their
apprenticeship programme being as inclusive as possible,
which means that we must ensure that the most disadvantaged
young people are not put off becoming apprentices. However,
a report published by the Learning and Work Institute this
week says issues to do with that expansion are not being
addressed as strongly as they need to be. Particularly in
respect of black and minority ethnic young people and care
leavers, we tabled amendments to both the Higher Education
Bill—that is outwith this morning’s discussion—and the
Technical and Further Education Bill. Those amendments
would have ensured that the new Institute for
Apprenticeships set targets for improving access to
apprenticeships and progression within them. After all, the
Office for Students has a mandated responsibility for
addressing access issues under the Higher Education Bill,
so why does the Institute for Apprenticeships not have a
similar responsibility? The Learning and Work Institute has
called for the new Institute for Apprenticeships to have
that responsibility, and we wholeheartedly agree.
There is also the issue of how people are put off becoming
apprentices because of their low-income background. Teach
First said in its progress report in 2016 that in every
region in England, young people from a low-income
background were less likely than their wealthier peers to
become apprentices, and it suggested that financial
barriers for those from low-income backgrounds were part of
that. That is consistent with the finding reported by the
Social Mobility Commission that youngsters from poor
families took up only 10% of apprenticeships even though
they accounted for 13% of those completing GCSEs.
In its briefing for this debate, the AOC said that it fears
that the Government’s existing approach to financial
support means that many young people from disadvantaged
backgrounds face barriers to accessing apprenticeships,
which is a disincentive for them in applying for
apprenticeships in the first place.
I want to touch on gender issues, which is appropriate on
International Women’s Day. The AOC has said that women
continue to struggle financially on apprenticeships. A
recent report by the Young Women’s Trust showed that women
receive an average of £4.82 an hour compared with the male
average of £5.85. According to a survey by the Association
of Employment and Learning Providers, the proportion of
apprentices reporting an increase in pay continues to be
dominated by men. Unsurprisingly, therefore, the Young
Women’s Trust was concerned by the fact that 16% of women
were out of work after their apprenticeship compared with
6% of men. It said that the differences in occupational
segregation by gender have hardly changed in more than a
decade. For example, the proportion of construction
apprentices who are female has only risen from 1% to 2%.
-
Of course, one of the problems is that some of the
apprenticeships leading on to higher-paid work tend to be
dominated by men. However, as my hon. Friend may know,
there has been a campaign recently, including a reception,
to promote the idea of women in engineering. Does he agree
that the Government ought to encourage more women to go
into such areas, where they can develop skills and earn
much more money?
-
I absolutely agree. To be fair to the Government, I think
they have said that on a number of occasions. Nevertheless,
if the perception of a pay gap continues, with associated
career blockages, into the 2020s, that will play havoc with
our aspirations to get far more women into those careers in
the first place. That is why in the last apprenticeships
debate I asked the Minister about the Government’s equality
analysis of the funding changes to apprenticeships last
autumn and how we will track improvements in
apprenticeships.
People from black, Asian and minority ethnic backgrounds
are also under-represented. I know that the recent
McGregor-Smith review underlined that point. However, I
would like the Minister to say whether it is still the
Government’s target to increase BAME apprenticeships by
20%, which was the target set by the previous Government.
That is important given the issues we are discussing today.
I do not have time to deal with care leavers in great
detail, but when care leavers move into independent living,
they often begin to manage their own budget fully for the
first time. There are concerns that because of a lack of
financial education and financial support, those young care
leavers are frequently falling into debt and financial
difficulty.
The Minister and I have both talked about the importance of
traineeships, but the Government have been silent so far on
what we can do to look at the negatives that still exist in
the system. We need to know what progress the Department is
making on the issue with the Department for Work and
Pensions. A major stumbling block for the Minister’s
predecessors has been the brokering of a cross-departmental
deal that would enable traineeships to be more accessible
and inviting for young people and employers. That goes to
issues around clawback and jobseeker’s allowance, which I
do not intend to talk in detail about today.
Finally, I want briefly to address travel costs. My hon.
Friend the Member for Luton North touched on the issue
significantly in his speech. The hon. Member for Central
Suffolk and North Ipswich (Dr Poulter) made excellent
points about the particular problems in rural areas, and
our colleagues from the Democratic Unionist party made some
good points on that as well. There are two or three areas
where financial support is most at risk. We have heard the
statistics about £24 a week being spent on travel, which is
about a quarter of the salary of an apprentice, if they are
earning national minimum wage.
In the light of the area review process and the creation of
the so-called fewer, more resilient colleges, the National
Society of Apprentices is concerned that travel time will
be too much for some apprentices, which will impede access
to certain roles. That echoes some of the issues that the
hon. Gentleman and others have talked about. That is why we
tried to make changes to the Technical and Further
Education Bill in Committee and on Report to enable the
institute to take on board the need to improve travel
concessions. We have pledged to restore the principles of
the education maintenance allowance, which provided so much
support for young people’s travel costs in pursuing their
studies. Apprentices remain a significant proportion of
those affected, with approximately 360,000 at colleges
being in that category.
There are other issues and scenarios to consider. What will
happen if colleges become insolvent or training providers
go bust? The insolvency issue has been an important part of
the Technical and Further Education Bill. Where the
challenge of college insolvency occurs—hopefully it will be
infrequent—that could pile up extra travel time costs for
apprentices who have to change their place of study as a
result. More recently, the Minister and I attended the
session organised by FE Week, so he will know that there
have been concerns about large providers going out of
business, leaving apprentices with huge loan debts to pay
and no qualifications. How do the Government plan to
compensate them? I have raised those issues with the
Government and the Minister, and he is aware of them.
Careers advice has been touched on, and it is an important
issue. It is not directly important for financial support,
but young people who get the best careers advice in college
or school are more likely to be able to seek out the better
apprenticeships, with better support and everything that
goes with it.
-
The problem with careers advice has been significant for
many years. Does my hon. Friend agree that just making
young people aware of the possibilities when they are very
young—possibly at primary school, but certainly at
secondary school—is very important?
-
I absolutely agree. That is why I warmly welcome Lord
Baker’s amendment to the Technical and Further Education
Bill, which would ensure that schools have to give access
to advice about apprenticeships. I also fully support the
ten-minute rule Bill tabled by my hon. Friend the Member
for Scunthorpe (Nic Dakin)—he was with us briefly at the
start of the debate—which would allow businesses and FE
providers to go into schools and let students know about
the opportunities. I am encouraged by the fact that the new
Ofsted chief inspector, Amanda Spielman, who I have spoken
to recently, is sympathetic to Ofsted making a much
stronger case in ensuring that apprenticeships rate higher
in the information given in schools.
Why does that matter for financial support? It matters
because in general, knowledge is power. Advance knowledge
enables those who have it to be a step ahead in getting
better apprenticeships. There will always be excellent
employers and sharp would-be apprentices who will be able
to access some of the funding, but if we want to make a
step change, we have to have major change across Government
in how apprenticeships are treated legally and financially.
All of us want to make that progress, but it is time to
tackle the shortcomings that put so many off
apprenticeships or cause them to be dispirited or in
trouble and therefore drop out. That must surely be a good
thing to do, not simply for National Apprenticeship Week,
but for all the year round.
10.25 am
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The Minister for Apprenticeships and Skills (Robert
Halfon)
I congratulate the hon. Member for Luton North (Kelvin
Hopkins) on securing this debate. I met him briefly in
passing in the corridors of the House last week, and I said
I was pleased that he had put in for and got this debate in
National Apprenticeship Week. He has an unrivalled
knowledge of apprenticeships, skills and further education,
and he made a significant contribution to the Technical and
Further Education Bill as it went through the House.
I will come on to the issues that the hon. Gentleman
raised, but he will know that in his constituency,
apprenticeship starts increased by 19% over the course of
the previous Parliament, which I am sure he welcomed.
Overall, apprenticeships have increased to 900,000, which I
think is the highest number on record. He raised a number
of issues that I would like to touch on, including
resource, equality, the skills deficit, wages, the cost of
living—the shadow Minister also touched on that—social
mobility and social justice.
Before I start on all those things, the shadow Minister
mentioned some of the things he has been doing in National
Apprenticeship Week, which is a wonderful week to celebrate
apprenticeships. It is very important as one of the rungs
on the ladder of opportunity is increasing the prestige of
apprenticeships and skills. It goes back to what the hon.
Member for Motherwell and Wishaw (Marion Fellows) was
saying: unless we increase the prestige of skills, we will
have the situations she described.
I met incredible apprentices and young people learning
skills at Bridgwater and Taunton College. One was learning
to be a luthier to fix violins. EDF apprentices are helping
to build Hinkley C. I met older apprentices, including a
47-year-old apprentice who was working for EDF. I met lab
technicians doing apprenticeships. I asked to meet the
Premier Inn apprentices in the hotel where I was staying in
the first two days of my travels around the south and
south-west. They were young 23-year-olds doing level 3 or
level 4. One was very young and had already become an
operations manager. I pay tribute to all those
organisations, including the excellent college, the Premier
Inn, Sunseeker—I went to visit its apprentices in Poole—EDF
Energy and Hinkley Point, and I pay tribute to all the
other apprentices I have met so far during National
Apprenticeship Week. They show the best of apprenticeships.
The shadow Minister is right that we need to make the
distinction between apprenticeships and apprentices. I
often get told off for using the word apprentices rather
than apprenticeships. He is looking at the individual, and
that is very important. I am glad to see that almost
everyone in the Chamber is wearing the new apprentices
badge, which we have launched as part of the ladder of
opportunity. We believe that apprenticeships offer young
people that ladder of opportunity to increase the prestige,
to meet our skills needs and to help those with social
disadvantage to ensure that we get the jobs, security and
prosperity that we need.
The hon. Member for Luton North said we were not resourcing
apprenticeships, but I take issue with him on that. By 2020
apprenticeship spending will have increased to £2.5
billion, almost double what it was in 2015. We have
introduced a levy not only to change behaviours, but to
make sure we have funding for big businesses and small
businesses to have apprentices.
-
I thank the Minister for giving way. It is a pleasure to
listen to him speaking. I said in my speech that the
Government have made some moves, but not enough. The
outcome will be successful if we achieve the number of
apprenticeships, trained apprentices and skills that we
require for our economy. If that works, what has happened
will be enough, but I suspect it is not yet really enough.
-
The hon. Gentleman is absolutely right. One of the rungs on
the ladder of opportunity is widespread quality provision,
which I will come on to. Although we have a huge amount of
work to do—and the work is never done—statistics show that
roughly 90% of apprentices get a good job afterwards, often
in the place where they did their apprenticeship, or go on
to additional education, which they may not otherwise have
thought of. That is a pretty good sign of the way things
are going, but I do not deny there is a lot of work to do.
Within the funding framework, millions of pounds go to
employers—I could list them all here—and providers. Special
help ensures we do everything possible to incentivise SMEs
to take on 16 to 18-year-olds, and they pay no training
costs if they have fewer than 50 employees. Huge amounts of
money are spent on trying to encourage businesses,
employers and other organisations to take on apprentices
with learning difficulties and disabilities. Amazingly, in
the construction industry, 10% of apprentices have
disabilities. I was astonished when I first saw that
statistic, which is a credit to the construction industry
and shows that the things we are trying to do in terms of
incentives for the trainer, provider and employer are
having an effect. Given the funding pressures that the
country faces, the money that is going into apprenticeships
is a significant amount and it is something I strongly
support.
The hon. Member for Motherwell and Wishaw said the Select
Committee went to Gateshead College, which is an incredible
and outstanding place. I went there a few weeks ago as part
of the industrial strategy launch. The college embeds
careers advice in every single part of the course. It does
huge amounts of work for LDD apprentices and huge amounts
of work to encourage people into apprenticeships. It is an
outstanding college that does a lot of work on mental
health. I am glad the Select Committee visited, and our job
is to find out how to replicate what the college does
across the country.
-
Dr Poulter
My right hon. Friend is right to outline the great
successes of the expansion of apprenticeships across the
country. I am sure he recognises the challenge of helping
people from poorer and less privileged backgrounds into
apprenticeships. Can he outline what steps the Government
are taking to improve that situation?
-
I promise to answer my hon. Friend’s question, but I hope
he does not mind if I answer it later because I want to
deal with the points made by the hon. Member for Luton
North, who initiated the debate. My hon. Friend raises an
important issue. One of my key motivations in my job is to
make sure that people from disadvantaged backgrounds can
have the same equality of opportunity as everybody else,
but I will come on to that in a minute.
-
On the question of careers, I met careers advisers and the
students who talked to them. I think the Minister should
address pre-college and what happens in schools to
encourage children and schools to look at alternative
academic progression.
-
The hon. Lady spoke thoughtfully in a previous debate on
apprenticeships in this Chamber. She is completely right. I
ask every single apprentice I meet—I have met a few
thousand since being in post—“Did you get any
apprenticeship or skills advice in your school?” and nine
times out of 10 they did not. If they say yes it is usually
because they have been to a university technical college or
a place that specialises in technical work. That is
depressing. I have mentioned before the story that
Gateshead College told me about its own degree apprentice
students and how the college was not allowed to talk to
them about apprenticeships in their schools. It was the
same with Heathrow airport and other apprentices I have
met. That is shocking. We are reviewing our careers
strategy and hope to publish a serious careers strategy in
the coming months. We want it to be more focused on
schools, and we are looking at the best way to incentivise
schools to teach students about apprenticeships and skills,
as not enough are doing that.
Women apprentices have been mentioned: 53% of apprentices
are female. A survey showed that female apprentices earn
more than men, so I do not accept the wage disparity point.
However, very few do STEM subjects. If I go to a college
that teaches healthcare, the room will be filled with
mostly females and there might be one or two men, which of
course is fantastic. If the subject is engineering or
electrical, it is all men, and that has got to change.
There are enlightened employers. Among the Jaguar
apprentices at Warwickshire College, 20% are women. There
are lots of other examples of good employers and we need to
encourage them, but a lot of that comes from careers advice
in schools. I was told by one student yesterday that when
they were given careers advice they were shown pictures.
All the pictures of engineering jobs showed men and the
nursing picture had a woman. That is why we face a problem.
It is a cultural problem in our country, and schools need
to do a huge amount more to promote apprenticeships. We are
doing an enormous amount of work on that. We strongly
welcome the Baker amendment, which the hon. Member for
Blackpool South highlighted, because that will make it law
that schools have to accept careers advice from further
education and apprenticeship providers.
The hon. Gentleman said we were not doing enough on
quality. Again, I take issue with that, although we have
had a problem in the past. There were too many
qualifications and an apprenticeship could mean anything. I
remember speaking to people at a hotel. I said, “Have you
got apprentices?” and they said, “Yes, we have got
apprentices. In fact, we have a few in the kitchen who are
here for a few weeks.” They were perfectly lovely people
who genuinely believed they had apprentices. We have
changed the situation and changed the legislation on
apprenticeships. An apprenticeship has to be for a minimum
of a year. Apprentices I met yesterday were doing two,
three and four-year apprenticeships. They have to spend 20%
of their time in training.
We have moved from frameworks to standards—we have had many
discussions about that—because of the spaghetti junction of
frameworks and qualifications. We have moved to standards
that are primarily employer-led. From the beginning of
April, subject to progress in the Lords, the new Institute
for Apprenticeships and Technical Education will design the
new standards and training for apprentices so that
employers will be given what they need, which has not
necessarily happened in the past. Degree apprenticeships
are not only about prestige, but quality. The Premier Inn
apprentice I met yesterday is 23 years old. Having done
levels 2 and 3 with the company, they were going on to do a
level 4 and level 5 degree apprenticeship. That will
transform the quality and prestige because it shows that
apprenticeships are really serious and go up to different
levels. They will offer students—again, as the hon.
Gentleman rightly pointed out—an amazing chance to get a
degree and earn while they learn. They will have no student
debt and will be virtually guaranteed a job at the end of
it. That is the future. That is what we need to encourage
our young people to do.
When I visited Tyneside, I spoke to Accenture, which has
degree apprentices, some of whom do not even have their
GCSEs yet, doing coding. I said to Accenture, “How do you
choose the people?” and it said, “It is attitude, attitude,
attitude.” It offers people from disadvantaged backgrounds
a chance to get a serious degree apprenticeship.
The hon. Member for Luton North rightly talked about the
skills deficit. I have acknowledged countless times that we
are way behind other OECD countries. Our skills deficit is
a long-standing problem, and we highlighted it in the
industrial strategy we announced a few weeks ago. That is
why we put money into STEM apprenticeships and increased
the frameworks by between 40% and 80%. We pledged £170
million to create the new institute of technology colleges
and £80 million to set up national colleges focusing on
nuclear, digital and the creative industries to try to
change the skills base. We created an employer-led
qualification to ensure that apprentice standards provide
the skills that employers need. Through the Sainsbury
reforms, which will be rolled out from 2019, every student
aged 16 will be able either to continue with a traditional
academic education, or to go down a state-of-the-art,
prestigious technical and professional educational route.
We are doing everything we can to address the skills
deficit that the hon. Gentleman rightly highlights.
-
I agree absolutely with what the Minister says about the
importance of raising skills in STEM subjects in
particular, but is it not the case that the failures are
lower down in the school system, rather than at the further
education or apprenticeship level? Is he saying to his
colleagues in education that we have to do as much as
possible to ensure that when youngsters reach the age of
16, their mathematics skills in particular are sufficiently
good to make them useful apprentices and eventually good
employees?
-
The hon. Gentleman is right, and he has highlighted that
issue previously. My right hon. Friend the Minister for
School Standards is resolute on high standards. They are
his passion. I work with him and I know he is doing
everything possible to ensure that students have the right
qualifications in maths and English by the time they leave
school. We are looking at things such as improving
functional skills post-16. As I say, we are putting our
money where our mouth is. We are investing in the new
institute of technology and the national colleges. The
Sainsbury reforms are being rolled out, and we are
investing in STEM apprenticeships. We are trying to undo a
20 or 30-year skills deficit caused by Governments of all
persuasions and employers not investing, training and
producing the skills that our country needs.
It is important to highlight a few points about wages. The
apprentice wage is £3.40 and will go up to £3.50 in April,
but 82% of apprentices are paid more than the national
minimum wage or the national living wage, according to data
from 2016: apprentices earn £6.31 per hour on average.
Wherever I go, I ask every apprentice I meet how much they
get paid—I do not just look at the surveys—and most of them
tell me that they get way above the apprentice minimum
wage.
I want to make a wider point about the wage issue. It is
important to note that apprentices are earning while they
are learning. I want to do everything I can to help
disadvantaged apprentices—I am going to come on to that
point in a minute—but if those apprentices were in higher
education or studying at further education colleges, they
would not be earning while they are learning. Apprentices
are earning while they are learning, and 82% of them get
more than the national minimum wage or the national living
wage. When we consider the benefits and that kind of thing,
we need to reflect carefully on the fact that apprentices
are earning money. Many of my constituents who are not
apprentices—no doubt this is also true of other hon.
Members’ constituents—earn the national minimum wage, but
apprentices get training and education in the knowledge
that 90% of them will get jobs at the end. That does not
mean that there is not a problem. Some apprentices come
from very low-income backgrounds—I think 25% of them come
from the poorest fifth of areas in the country. It is
important to put that fact on the record. I will come on to
child benefit in a minute.
-
The Minister is making a fair point about apprentices
earning a wage, but families—particularly those on modest
incomes—are acutely aware of the tipping point where the
benefits that those people might get if they were in
education outweigh the wage they might get if they were in
an apprenticeship. When incomes are tight, such marginal
differences make a difference to the choices families make.
-
I am acutely aware—I see the pressures on my
constituents—of the pressures that families face, and I do
not want to create disincentives for families who are
working but struggling. Often, one member of the family
works in the day, one works at night and the son or
daughter does an apprenticeship, yet the family are
struggling to keep their heads above water. I accept that.
We announced that we will be doing a serious, committed
review—this relates to the question that my hon. Friend the
Member for Central Suffolk and North Ipswich (Dr Poulter)
asked—of how to get more apprentices from disadvantaged
backgrounds. We have a £60 million fund to incentivise
providers to take apprentices from the most deprived
backgrounds, and FE colleges can use some of their bursary
money to help apprentices with travel and overcome some of
the other obstacles that have been raised.
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Dr Poulter
I hope my hon. Friend the Minister recognises that that is
inadequate for many students living in very rural areas.
Some colleges cover vast geographical areas and some
students have to do 100-mile round trips daily to attend
college. They also have to pay for transport or car and
petrol money to get to the workplace where they are doing
their apprenticeship, which is a real disincentive in some
rural areas. Will my hon. Friend the Minister look at the
challenges that rural apprentices face?
-
I accept the premise of my hon. Friend’s question. I have
been to rural areas to meet apprentices, and the younger
ones in particular say that the cost of transport is a
problem. We are looking at that as part of the social
mobility review for apprentices. Again, if those
apprentices were just going to an FE college they would not
be earning any money, and if they were at university they
would have to have a loan. At least they are earning, and
the vast majority of them are earning more than the
apprentice minimum wage. We have to strike a fair balance
between the needs of the people my hon. Friend describes,
which are very real, and fairness to taxpayers on low
incomes, in terms of the overall costs and benefits. It is
open to colleges to give apprentices bursary funding to
help them with bus travel, and many do so.
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On the review—this is the first I have heard of it, but I
welcome it—I urge the Minister, in connection with the
points I made earlier, to look not only within the
Department but at some of the broader issues, such as the
16-hour rule and the relationship with the Department for
Work and Pensions.
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We announced the review in November last year, with that
final announcement on the levy. I am working closely with
my hon. Friend the Minister for Employment at the DWP. I
cannot say that we will come up with a magic solution, or
that there is a magic funding pot, but there are other
issues, such as those to do with benefits and so on—for
example, if a single parent were working in a coffee shop
but wanted to do a teaching assistance apprenticeship and
the wage was literally the minimum of £3.40. We are looking
at all those, although I hope that when universal credit
comes through fully it will deal with some of the problems.
As I say, we are committed to that. We also have a £60
million fund.
In addition, the National Union of Students’ has its
Apprentice extra card. I helped to launch it and worked
with the scheme in the previous Parliament when I was a
Back Bencher. My predecessor, my right hon. Friend the
Member for South Holland and The Deepings (Mr Hayes),
attended the launch. Apprentices, as young people under 25,
are also entitled to some rail discounts and so on.
The hon. Member for Blackpool South talked about
traineeships, to which I am very committed. We have spent
more than £50 million on them. There were more than 24,000
traineeship starts between August 2015 and July 2016. Fifty
per cent. of trainees progress into apprenticeships and 94%
of employers consider traineeships an effective way of
increasing young people’s chances. Traineeships are part of
the £5.4 billion 16-to-19 budget funded by the Skills
Funding Agency. It is also important to note that almost
20% of those who do traineeships have learning difficulties
or disabilities. I think that is a wonderful figure. We
would like to increase it further, but it is pretty high
already.
We also still have the target to increase black and
minority ethnic take-up of apprenticeships by 20%, and we
have said that publicly. We are doing everything possible
to increase apprenticeships in the public sector, with a
new 2.3% target. I have been asked about apprentices with
disabilities and we are working hard to implement the
recommendations of the Maynard taskforce, led by my hon.
Friend the Member for Blackpool North and Cleveleys (Paul
Maynard). We agreed with everything it suggested and our
aim is to have full implementation by April 2018.
I thank the hon. Member for Blackpool South for mentioning
council tax. I will discuss those matters with my
counterparts in the Department for Communities and Local
Government, especially if, as he says, apprentices are not
getting rebates to which they are entitled. I will look
into what we can do about that.
Before I conclude, I apologise, Ms Ryan. I should have said
at the beginning of my speech that it is a pleasure to
serve under your chairmanship.
Yes, we have a lot of work to do. The hon. Member for Luton
North has highlighted how we need to continue to work on
quality, to ensure that those 3 million apprentices have
quality apprenticeships. He is right to highlight that we
need to do everything possible to help the socially
disadvantaged. I am not saying that we have all the
answers, but the statistics show—the numbers show, not just
me—that we are helping. The individual stories show that we
are helping in human as well as numbers terms. Whenever I
go around the country, I speak to as many people as
possible. Almost every Thursday I go around colleges and to
meet apprentices. This week, had it not been for this
important debate, I would probably have been in a college
early this morning, before the Budget. We are investing in
the skills and the quality, and we are creating and doing
everything possible to create a ladder of opportunity to
ensure that apprentices from all backgrounds may climb it
to the jobs, security and prosperity they need.
10.53 am
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It has been a great pleasure to lead in this debate. I thank
all those who have spoken: the hon. Member for Motherwell and
Wishaw (Marion Fellows); the hon. Member for Central Suffolk
and North Ipswich (Dr Poulter) who made some useful
interventions; and of course my hon. Friend the Member for
Blackpool South (Gordon Marsden), the shadow Minister, who
made a very useful and thorough speech.
I also thank the Minister for his response. We spent some
years enjoying each other’s company—I hope—on a Select
Committee, and I applaud his genuine enthusiasm for his job
and for apprenticeships. I hope that some of the issues that
have been raised today can be advanced by him within his
Department. There are still problems of finance, expressed by
a number of institutions, but we have touched on them,
drawing them to the Minister’s attention, and I hope for
progress in future. It is very important for our future that
we train our young people in the appropriate skills. We live
in a highly competitive world and we have to have a properly
skilled and educated workforce. I like to think that the
Minister will make a contribution to the success of that in
future.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered financial support for
apprentices.
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