There is limited knowledge about how UK employers make decisions about training and how employers and workers are responding to the need to upskill and retrain. This research helps fill that gap.
Supported by Gatsby Charitable Foundation, the report explores employer and employee decision making about training and the development of higher technical skills, providing insights to inform how national and regional policy can support changing skills needs and drive productivity. The project involved qualitative research with employers and employees in the advanced manufacturing and construction sectors.
In England, how well the Lifelong Learning Entitlement and Growth and Skills Levy support the delivery of the UK’s Modern Industrial Strategy depends on the extent to which adults and their employers choose to invest their time and money in upskilling in key areas. As devolution progresses, Mayoral Strategic Authorities will also gain greater power over what education and training is offered in their regions, and how to incentivise uptake.
Economic change, including advances in technology, automation and the transition to net zero, is impacting on the jobs available and skills required. Only one in ten adults are currently skilled to level 4 or 5, with people who don’t opt to go to higher education often struggling to progress at work. With 80% of the 2035 workforce having already left full-time education and people working longer, it is vital that workers can upskill and reskill throughout their careers.