Advantech Europe

IET urges Government to reinvest wasted funds to plug £63 billion skills gap

01 February 2023

(Image: Shutterstock)
(Image: Shutterstock)

The digital skills gap is costing the UK economy £63 billion a year. Now, the Institution of Engineering & Technology is calling on the Government to direct unspent funding to help fill it.

In a fresh review by the IET of skills within engineering and technology – a key sector to help the UK reach its net-zero targets – 47 percent of employers shockingly report a technical skills gap within their current workforce, with 45 percent of those specifying a lack in adapting to new equipment or IT skills.


Almost all (92 percent) engineering and technology employers with a digital skills strategy require additional skills to deliver the strategy across innovation, agile thinking and management skills.


With many skills gaps resulting in vastly reduced productivity, innovation and growth, the IET’s Skills for a Digital Future survey calls for the Government to look at ways to prioritise unspent funding to meet the demand for the future. This could involve making the Apprenticeship Levy more flexible for employers, so that they can upskill and reskill employees to plug the UK’s growing digital skills gap.


Over £2bn raised by the Apprenticeship Levy has been returned to the Treasury since its introduction in 2017. In that time, the number of new apprentice starts has fallen and employers are spending less on training per employee in real terms. 


In many cases, the levy is transferring money away from training opportunities – up to two-thirds of employers are not using their levy entitlements.


Skills in emerging technologies are expected to be more important than ever in the future, such as artificial intelligence (36 percent), extended reality (22 percent) and quantum engineering/computing (22 percent).
 

Looking ahead to the future, 31 percent of employers say that artificial intelligence/machine learning will be important to sector growth. 


However, 50 percent of these employers say they do not have don’t have the necessary skills in this area. 


Dr Graham Herries, Chair of the IET’s Innovation and Skills panel, said: “The UK’s digital skills strategy must align with the needs of employers. The findings of this survey point to three key actions for [the] Government. 


“These include funding for upskilling and reskilling – which could come from using the unspent apprenticeship levy; providing sustained support for skills in emerging technology by seeing training as an investment; and providing targeted support for SMEs, who may find it more challenging to provide training.


“While digital skills must be integrated into STEM learning, over 80 percent of 2030’s workforce is already in work. Reskilling the current workforce must be a major part of the solution. 


“Most employers support this – 74 percent of engineering employers view their staff as ‘agile’, and generally respond to skills gaps by providing more training, rather than hiring externally. 


“Boosting the UK’s digital skills capability can unlock our huge technological potential and boost growth.”


To address the skills shortage, employers think on-the-job training (63 percent) is more effective than formal qualifications (35 percent) or e-learning (21 percent), with 44 percent of employers already giving their employees digital skills training. 


However, large companies (58 percent) are more than twice as likely as SMEs (27 percent) to provide this.


This is the 16th year that the IET has published a skills report. The fieldwork was conducted online with 1,235 senior decision-makers in engineering organisations between 27 September and 30 October 2022 by market research agency YouGov.


The IET will be presenting the findings of its survey to parliamentarians at The Parliamentary and Scientific Committee on Tuesday 7 February. The IET’s Skills for a Digital Future is available on the IET’s website.


Contact Details and Archive...

Print this page | E-mail this page


Optimal Drive Technology

This website uses cookies primarily for visitor analytics. Certain pages will ask you to fill in contact details to receive additional information. On these pages you have the option of having the site log your details for future visits. Indicating you want the site to remember your details will place a cookie on your device. To view our full cookie policy, please click here. You can also view it at any time by going to our Contact Us page.