The FMB warns that the UK construction industry is suffering from a skills shortage despite the recent economic downturn, largely due to a shortage in the number of apprenticeship places being offered by employers.
Brian Berry, Director of External Affairs at the FMB said: “Quite simply the UK is failing to deliver enough labour, as evidenced by the fact that the UK was 11th in the International Skills Competition at the World Skills Summit in 2007.
“Britain is failing on two fronts: first, failing to meet demand and secondly, failing to train enough people with the right skills to the right levels. However, the failure to address the skills shortage is as much about too few interested employers as it is about too few interested school leavers.
“For example in 2007, 30,000 young people applied for an apprentice position but only 8,500 were accepted. This is within a sector in which there are approximately 185,000 construction companies within the UK but only 4 per cent of which employ an apprentice. Clearly, the construction sector needs to be better motivated to reverse this situation if Britain is to maintain its long term competiveness.”
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