The Business Magazine - B2B Business News - Site Logo
The Business Magazine May 2024
Read now
PICK YOUR EDITION

South: One million manufacturing workers needed, says EEF

7 May 2014
Share
EEF,-Business-Magazine

Britain’s manufacturers are facing a recruitment ‘crunch’ with the quality and quantity of graduates failing to match up to industry needs, according to a new report – Improving the Quality and Quantity of Graduate-level Skills – by EEF, the manufacturers’ organisation.

By 2020 manufacturers will need almost a million replacement workers. However, this demand comes at a time when skills from within the UK are already in short supply, while companies face ever-increasing difficulties in recruiting from outside of Europe.

In the next three years alone, 66% of manufacturers plan to recruit an engineering graduate. Over a quarter of firms (27%) will also be on the recruitment trail for those with business and administration degrees, while 20% will be taking on people with a  technology degree.

However, their plans could be holed by the limited number of STEM students coupled with the number of graduates lacking industry experience and manufacturing knowledge. As a result, eight in 10 manufacturers (80%) want to see higher education establishments prioritise improving the employability of students, while 79% want courses to be designed to meet industry needs. Importantly, almost three quarters (74%) want to see universities build stronger relationships with employers - crucial if students are to gain valuable work experience and therefore the skills and knowledge which employers say are currently lacking.

Over six in 10 manufacturers (63%) think that increasing the number of placements and internship opportunities at universities will increase the number of STEM students. In addition, many see European graduates as being more ‘rounded’ and ‘ready for the world of work’ having spent more time in industry than their UK peers.  This makes EU graduates attractive to skills-hungry employers in the UK – over a third (35%) have recruited from this pool in the past three years.

But when it comes to casting their net wider and looking at the pool of graduates outside of Europe, manufacturers find themselves hitting further barriers. Over half (53%) have found the process of sponsoring an overseas (non-EU) student to be very time-consuming, while others have had difficulties obtaining visas (44%) and sponsorship licences (41%). Worryingly, just 29% found the entire process easy.

Manufacturers are taking action by boosting their investment in higher-level skills. Four in 10 are offering placements (39%) and internships (40%) to undergraduates, while almost a quarter (23%) are sponsoring students through university. They are also offering Higher Apprenticeships (26%) and supporting existing employees through university (56%).

However, they face significant hurdles in these activities and are calling on the Government to put the right building blocks in place so that higher education and industry are able to work more closely together to boost the quality and quantity of the future workforce.

Jim Davison, South East region director at EEF, said: “With UK manufacturing continuing to expand and grow, access to the right skills in the right numbers is ever more important. Businesses are engaging with universities, sponsoring students and hiring graduates, but we need action now if we are to meet expected demand. Decisive steps must be taken if we do not want to see the manufacturing sector increasingly looking outside the UK for talent for fear of otherwise running out of steam.

“Boosting the pool of talented, skilled and employable young people in the UK is a win-win for the young people themselves, for manufacturers and the wider economy. Manufacturers are investing in skills for the future, but are hitting hurdles. This is why the Government must put the right building blocks in place.

“It is vital to ensure that there is greater collaboration between employers and educators, that universities have sufficient STEM funding and that all STEM students undertake work experience in industry. Not only would this significantly improve the quality and quantity of graduates, but it would send out a clear message that gaining these much-needed and valuable skills is the way forward.”

www.eef.org.uk/blog


Related topics

Related articles

Latest Deal Ticket

view more
Entropie (Buckinghamshire)
has been acquired by
Focus Group (West Sussex)
May 2024
UNDISCLOSED
Who's behind the deal?

Upcoming events

view more
06
Jun

South Coast Property Awards 2024

Hilton Southampton
Utilita Bowl
More info
12
Jun

Leadership Roundtable: Developing strategies for financial returns over the next decade

Herrington Carmichael, Farnborough Aerospace Centre, GU14 6XR

More info
18
Jul

Thames Valley Tech & Innovation Awards 2024

Reading FC Conference & Events
Select Car Leasing Stadium, Reading
More info
26
Sep

Thames Valley Property Awards 2024

Ascot Pavilion
Ascot Racecourse
More info
03
Oct

South Coast Tech & Innovation Awards 2024

Hilton Southampton
Utilita Bowl
More info
07
Nov

Thames Valley Deals Awards 2024

Reading FC Conference & Events
Select Car Leasing Stadium, Reading
More info
21
Nov

Hampshire Business Awards 2024

Farnborough International
Exhibition & Conference Centre
More info

Related articles