Millions of lost opportunities to improve qualifications are holding back economic growth and creating a “great skills divide” as a result of cuts to skills budgets, a new report warns.
By 2035, one in two adults will hold a higher education qualification. This would leave the UK 10th in the OECD, down from 6th in 2022, as other countries continue to expand higher education. The UK is also on track to make little progress in intermediate skills, leaving one in three adults qualified just to GCSE or equivalent level, behind many comparator countries.
Learning and Work Institute (L&W), the independent policy and research organisation behind the report, warns the UK’s skills base risks plateauing mid-table in the OECD at an estimated opportunity cost to the economy of £20 billion a year. The country’s chronic inability to meet demand for skills is a contributor to low economic growth over the past 15 years, with average wages now £12,000 per year below what they would be on pre-financial crisis trends.
The Government has cut investment in skills in England by £1 billion since 2010, while employers are investing 26% less in training per employee than in 2005. L&W’s new report shows these cuts have disproportionately affected people in the poorest areas and with the lowest qualifications. Government cuts have meant a 27% fall in publicly funded learners from the most deprived areas, while the number of learners from the most affluent areas have barely changed. Meanwhile, people qualified to degree level are three times more likely to get training at work than non-graduates.
UK adults have gained almost seven million fewer qualifications over the last decade than if attainment had stayed at 2010-11 levels. Nine million adults in England currently lack essential skills in literacy or numeracy. While the country’s overall qualifications profile is projected to improve by 2035, L&W estimates that the UK will have more than double the proportion of people with low qualifications than that of comparators like Ireland and France.
Launching a year-long research project supported by the awarding bodies City and Guilds and NOCN, L&W calls for a higher ambition to boost social mobility and meet the rising and changing skills needs of the UK economy.