The chief executive of the Institute of the Motor Industry Steve Nash has welcomed the ambitious apprenticeships target of the new government, but questions whether it’s achievable.
Data from the Skills Funding Agency suggest that apprenticeship starts, in the motor retail sector alone, have plateaued in the last 12-18 months.
Nash wonders whether new minister for business Sajid Javid has been set a task too great to achieve.
Nash said: “If the Government wants to achieve its goal of three million additional apprenticeships in five years, 50,000 new apprenticeships need to be created every single month – and the clock’s already ticking.
“Making the task even more challenging is the fact that young people will soon have to be in education or training until they are 18, which means that schools will inevitably be reluctant to release all but the least academically able students into vocational training, which is not what businesses need.
“Furthermore, the desperate lack of careers advice in schools will make it extremely difficult for candidates and their families to make reasoned choices.
“In their manifesto, the Conservatives promised to give employers much more control of apprenticeships so that they can ‘teach in the workplace’. The IMI is encouraged by this because we firmly believe that employers need to be able to tailor apprenticeships to their specific needs.
"We do, however, still have some concerns about the plan to replace job seekers allowance for 18-21 year olds with a ‘youth allowance’, limited to six months and then requiring the young person to take on an apprenticeship, traineeship or community work to continue to receive benefits. Is there a risk this will create a significant number of trainees or apprentices that are not actually in it for the training, but just to secure their benefits?
"High quality apprenticeships of the type that the Government are exhorting businesses to create require high quality candidates, not conscripts.”
Darryn Lewis - 27/05/2015 10:30
3 million apprenticeships in the next five years is very ambitious however should be achievable if everyone focuses on this target. Stopping benefits is very risky as yes this may increase the numbers in apprentices that are only doing it because they don't want to lose their benfits however it may actually open their eyes to see what options are out there for them and that they don't need to rely on benefits. Truth is I don't believe we will hit the target but the government are doing all they can to help in my eyes. http://www.findapprenticeships.co.uk