Twelve million people – the combined population of London,
Greater Manchester and Staffordshire - will be without a job or
in work they are over-qualified for by 2024, new research for the
Local Government Association estimates today.
Council leaders say the current national employment and
skills system is failing local businesses and
residents. A maze of
centrally-governed skills and employment funding – totalling
£10.5 billion a year – run by eight government departments or
agencies and scattered across 20 different national
schemes – is confusing, fragmented,
untargeted and ineffective.
In a new report on the future of public services
published at its Annual Conference this week, the LGA is calling
for new powers for councils to help transform
the lives of millions of people who could be trapped in a future
skills gap.
Devolving all back-to-work, skills,
apprenticeship, careers advice, and business support schemes and
funding to the local areas in which they are used will allow
better coordination of services to help people get the skills
they need to progress in work, and supply businesses with right
skills at the right time to help local economies grow.
Research for the LGA by the Learning and Work Institute
(LWI) reveals that the skills gap by 2024 will result
from:
· 9.2
million low-skilled people chasing 3.1 million low-skilled jobs –
a surplus of 6.2 million low-skilled workers;
· 12.6
million people with intermediate skills chasing 10.7 million jobs
– a surplus of 1.9 million people;
· 16.1
million high skilled jobs with only 11.9 million high-skilled
workers – a deficit of 4.2 million.
Failure to address this growing skills crisis will mean the
average worker will be £1,176 a year worse off by 2024 while £90
billion of economic growth will be lost.
The LGA said improving the nation’s skills base is urgent
as we move towards a post-Brexit Britain as higher-skilled
migration has historically played an important role in addressing
skills gaps.
LWI analysis of official data found that almost 2 million
migrants from the European Economic Area are in highly-skilled
jobs or are qualified at the equivalent of degree level or
higher. By contrast, 790,000 work in low-skilled jobs or have low
or no qualifications.
Councils and their partners can more effectively reduce
long-term unemployment and the number of young people out of work
by targeting support far better than our current complex and
fragmented national employment and skills system.
It is calling on the Government to give groups of councils
across England the power and funding to deliver a one-stop ‘Work
Local’ service for skills, apprenticeship, employment, careers
advice and business support provision within five years. It would
bring together local skills planning, oversee job support
including Jobcentre Plus and the Work and Health Programme and
coordinate careers advice and guidance for young people and
adults.
Analysis reveals that each year across a local area, Work
Local could improve outcomes for residents and reduce the skills
gap with an estimated 8,500 people more in work and 6,000 people
increasing their skills, benefiting the local economy
by £420 million.
Cllr Sir Richard Leese, Chair of the LGA’s City Regions
Board, said:
“This research paints a worrying vision of the skills gap
facing the nation. Without radical reform, swathes of people face
a future where they have skills mismatched for jobs, risking them
being in low paid, insecure work, and reliant on benefits, at a
huge cost to people’s lives and the local and national
economy.
“The current system for getting the unemployed into work is
not working for the economy, for employers or individuals. This
has to change for the future economic prosperity of this country.
Limits on EU migration after Brexit could exacerbate these skills
challenges which makes it more important than ever to have a
better system in place for retraining and upskilling the current
workforce.
“Councils want to ensure everyone is fully equipped with
the skills they need to compete for future jobs. Together with
local partners, councils best understand the needs of their
residents, local economies and address their skills needs. The
LGA’s Work Local is a local solution to the national
challenge.”
Cllr Mark Hawthorne, Chairman of the LGA’s People and
Places Board, said:
“The
Government will spend £10.5 billion this year on 20 different
national employment and skills
schemes. It
can no longer afford to spend billions on separate
national programmes when there are better more local
solutions that can coordinate all local partners to better help
those most in need of support.
“Local government across England is ready to take
the lead to tackle the skills crisis facing the nation and get
the local economy moving. With commitment from central government
and the right funding and powers, we can start today.”