Manufacturers call for unique sector approach on Apprentice funding

15/02/2022

Manufacturers call for unique targeted sector approach on Apprenticeship funding to create more high value, high growth jobs

Nearly £2bn in unspent levy funds last year as skills shortages climb

  • Special approach to levy for manufacturing sector needed to allow levy funds to be spent on wages for new apprentices
  • Allow manufacturers to spend levy funds on capital expenditure to support the delivering of high-quality opportunities
  • High proportion of manufacturing companies based in the Red Wall areas of Britain – where manufacturing can create more high-value job opportunities to help the UK level up

Britain’s manufacturers are calling today on Government to adopt a special approach to how the manufacturing sector can spend their companies’ left-over levy funds, currently expiring and going to waste. They are asking to be able to spend those funds- which amounted to nearly £2bilion last year – to pay the wages of new apprentices, a move which would allow a significant boost to new young recruits into the sector.

Manufacturing has already been officially recognised as a growth sector by Government, and the sector is ideally placed to help deliver the Prime Minister’s promise of more good jobs in those left-behind areas of the country where he has pledged to focus his levelling up agenda.

With a high proportion of manufacturing companies based in the so-called Red Wall areas of Britain, manufacturing can create more high wage, high-value job opportunities to help the UK level up. The sector already delivers wages higher than the rest of the economy with 2.7 million jobs countrywide. This sits alongside a £191 billion contribution to national output with massive growth potential and agility in the sector to expand.

In spite of last year’s pandemic, 47% of manufacturers still managed to recruit an engineering or manufacturing apprentice, but only 45% saying they plan to do so in this coming year. There remains untapped potential with almost a fifth considering taking on apprentice in the next 12 months.

With a bit of flex in the levy spending arrangements, manufacturers could do even more in terms of building the workforce of the future. Manufacturers are telling us they are keen to take on more apprentices to fill the skills gap which would in turn allow businesses to grow and help level up regions. During the pandemic manufacturers showed the amazing agility of the sector, with many switching production lines almost overnight to produce vital PPE products for the NHS and the sector is ripe for further expansion.

With a bit of flex in the levy spending arrangements, manufacturers could do even more in terms of building the workforce of the future. Manufacturers are telling us they are keen to take on more apprentices to fill the skills gap which would in turn allow businesses to grow and help level up regions. During the pandemic manufacturers showed the amazing agility of the sector, with many switching production lines almost overnight to produce vital PPE products for the NHS and the sector is ripe for further expansion.

Currently an average four year engineering apprenticeship can cost a business up to £120,000 to deliver yet just £27,000 of that cost is currently claimable from levy funds. The system as it currently stands often leaves companies struggling to pay an apprentice, leaving their levy contribution unspent.

Government has already recognised manufacturing as a growth sector, so allowing businesses to recruit an increased number of apprentices with the flexibility to support them financially by using their excess levy funds for wages. A special targeted approach to levy funds would go a long way to allowing manufacturers to deliver even more high-wage, high-value job opportunities across the UK.

Jamie Carter Senior Policy Manager, Make UK

About Make UK

Make UK, The Manufacturers’ Organisation, is the representative voice of UK manufacturing, with offices in London, Brussels, every English region and Wales.

Collectively we represent 20,000 companies of all sizes, from start-ups to multinationals, across engineering, manufacturing, technology and the wider industrial sector. We directly represent over 5,000 businesses who are members of Make UK. Everything we do – from providing essential business support and training to championing manufacturing industry in the UK and the EU – is designed to help British manufacturers compete, innovate and grow.

From HR and employment law, health and safety to environmental and productivity improvement, our advice, expertise and influence enables businesses to remain safe, compliant and future-focused.