From education to employment

Labour reveals majority of Government departments still missing their own apprenticeships target

@UKLabour has revealed in #NationalApprenticeshipWeek #NAW2021 that the majority of Government departments are still missing their own target for employing apprentices in the public sector nearly four years after it was introduced.

New data collected through parliamentary questions shows 11 out of the 17 Departments which responded, have failed to meet the 2.3% target set in 2017.

Of those Departments failing to meet the target, seven were failing to meet it in 2019, while the Department for Housing Communities and Local Government which employed the most apprentices in 2019, has since lagged behind with apprentices making up just 1.4% of current staff.

Apprentices make up less than 1% of the Department for Culture, Media and Sports’ 900 staff and in the Department for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs’ only 1% of 3,500 staff are apprentices.

The Government has overseen a sharp decline in apprentice numbers with 189,000 apprentice opportunities disappearing since 2016.  Despite introducing a cash incentive of either £2,000 or £1,500 for employers to take on a new apprentice, figures show that the number of new starts between August and October 2020 was down more than a quarter on the same period in 2019.

Kate Green MP 100x100Kate Green MP, Labour’s Shadow Education Secretary, said:

“The Government has overseen a staggering decline in apprentice numbers since 2016. Ministers are failing to create opportunities within their own Departments, and their cash incentive is failing to encourage employers to take on new apprentices.

“The Government should adopt Labour’s proposal for a structured wage subsidy to create the apprenticeship opportunities young people need to gain productive skills and long-term employment.”

In 2017 the Government set the target for public sector bodies with 250 or more staff in England to employ an average of at least 2.3% of their staff as new apprentice starts over the period of 1 April 2017 to 31 March 2021. 

Data on apprentices in each Department can be seen below:

Department

Number of apprentices

% of workforce

2019 % of workforce

Northern Ireland

0

0

2

Digital, Culture, Media and Sport

14

0.81

1.3

Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

 

1.00

0.9

Housing, Communities and Local Government

34

1.40

3.55

Justice

 

1.68

1

Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy

97

1.78

2.87

Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs

122

1.4/1.9

FCO: 1.69

Transport

302

1.92

1.41

Wales

1

2

7

Prime Minister’s Office

 

2.13

Home Office

735

2.29

1

Health and Social Care

58

2.5

3.03

Defence

 

3

2.3

Work and Pensions

 

3.1

3

International Trade

115

3.2

1.8

Treasury

83

4.2

1.7

Education

 

4.9

3.35

Answers have not been received from the Cabinet Office or Scotland Office.

The Attorney General’s office has staffing levels below the 250 employee threshold for the 2.3% target.

900 staff are employed at the Department of Culture, Media and Sport 

3,500 staff are employed at the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

The Plan for Jobs notes state that the funding allocated to Boosting worksearch, skills and apprenticeships: “Includes the indicative cost of 100,000 incentive payments for new apprenticeship hires. Final costs will depend on the number of new apprentices hired and may be lower.” 

New starts were down 27.6% in August – October 2020, compared to the same period in 2019, the number of apprenticeships declined by 189,000 between 2016/17 and 2019/20.


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