The UK manufacturing industry is calling on Government to
step up and do more to encourage young people to consider engineering as a
career and, thereby, help to close the ongoing skills gap. This is according to
a new poll of over 600 industry professionals commissioned by Subcon in association with leading trade magazine The Engineer.
The survey revealed that:
·
67 per cent of UK
manufacturers are worried about the future availability of skilled staff for
their business
·
72 per cent don’t
believe Government is doing enough to promote skills training
·
83 per cent believe there are not enough young people working in UK manufacturing and engineering
·
88 per cent claim engineering is a good career choice for young people
·
90 per cent claim the industry would benefit from more young people working within it
·
Just 54 per cent currently train
apprentices
·
40 per cent don’t
know whether The Apprenticeship Levy (introduced on 6 April 2017) is a good
thing
“The engineering skills gap is the biggest challenge facing the UK manufacturing industry right now." Sid Shaikh, Engineering R&D Manager, Ocado.
In response to the estimate that the UK needs an additional 1.8 million
engineers by 2020*, Government has introduced The Apprenticeship Levy, and
announced £170 million worth of investment in technology institutes as part of
its Industrial Strategy and the introduction of T-Levels. Despite this, nearly
three quarters of manufacturing professionals believe Government could do more,
specifically with regards education.
When asked what
industry and the Government can do to encourage more young people to consider manufacturing as a career, the top five answers polled were:
1.
Increase and improve education at school level
2. Invest in apprenticeship training
3. Promote potential career progression
and opportunities
4. Increase pay at all levels
5.
Improve the image of the industry
The industry speaks
Sid Shaikh, Engineering R&D Manager, Ocado: “The engineering skills gap is the biggest challenge
facing the UK manufacturing industry right now. If Government is to encourage
more young people to work in the industry, we should introduce engineering
qualifications earlier in the education process, create targeted promotion and
incentives for women and young people to take the Engineering GCSE, and create
a culture that is more welcoming to new starters that are keen to learn.”
Alan Pendry, Associate Professor of Advanced Systems Engineering in the
School of Engineering and the Built Environment at Birmingham City University: “Apprenticeships and degree apprenticeships are an excellent opportunity
for UK companies to grow the essential skills needed by our growing
manufacturing industry and to take us into the fourth industrial revolution. If
I were in Government and wanted to encourage
more young people and women into engineering, I would get rid of ‘career
politicians’ and replace the cabinet with engineers: 50 per cent male and 50
per cent female, educate school teachers as to what engineering and
manufacturing in the 21st century is and promote positive
action without the perceived fear of discrimination in the appointment of women
to engineering posts.”
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