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This report tracks the up take of entry opportunities and and training within the home building industry, highlighting the skills gap and challenges in meeting government housing targets.
Download a copy of the A Hard Hat to Fill report
While the Government’s ambitions for home building are welcome, how successful they are will, in part, depend on the necessary skills and labour being available. At present, the industry has a workforce that allows it to deliver current levels of output, but delivery levels are far below where we need to be.
The home building industry has long faced a significant skills shortage due to:
To deliver on the Government’s housing targets, home building needs to increase by 80,000 units a year based on the most recent net additions figures. Research undertaken by the Home Builders Federation (HBF) has found that for every 10,000 new homes the industry builds, 30,000 new recruits are needed, which means that 240,000 people need to be recruited across a broad range of roles and skills. In addition, the transition to the Future Homes Standard will involve significant changes to the design and construction of new homes. While this presents an opportunity for the country to become a world leader in the knowledge and skills base for future housing design and delivery, the emergence of new skills requirements as a result has the potential exacerbate the skills challenge further still.
Even if all systemic levers are pulled to enable sufficient land and planning approvals for this level of home building, closing the skills gap requires a long-term plan for the future of apprenticeships, further education, and supporting the students and businesses which make up our workforce.
The Government has, so far, made numerous welcome announcements that aim at improving the recruitment and retention of the home building workforce, such as the replacement of the misfunctioning Apprenticeship Levy with the new Growth and Skills Levy, and the establishment of Skills England as a body to oversee the reforms and to identify and monitor gaps in the country’s workforce.
However, as the current training figures show, the scale of the challenge is vast and there is still much more to be done.
One of the most popular and utilised routes into a construction role is through apprenticeships. According to HBF’s workforce census, around half of the onsite workforce had undertaken an apprenticeship for the trade they were working in.
However, in recent years, the ability for businesses to recruit and train apprentices has waned due to various reasons:
To reach 300,000 homes a year, we need 240,000 new recruits across the broader housing sector, including:
However, the number of apprenticeships being supported by the current system is only a small portion of what is needed.
As the table below shows, is it only plumbers that had enough people undertake an apprenticeship for the trade last year. For bricklayers and groundworkers – the trades most in demand – just 10% and 3% respectively of the required additional workforce were being trained for these trades last year.
Overall, the last year’s apprentices made up just 17% of what is required across these eight key trades.
Even looking to the five-year totals for apprenticeships, there is still a significant gap, with just two of the eight trades seeing enough trainees coming through the system.
Around 100,000 students are enrolled in further education (FE) construction courses at any one time, but the courses are not producing work-ready potential recruits.
Just 25% of these learners gain employment in construction within six months of finishing their course, while 60% leave the industry completely shortly after finishing their training.
Students completing FE courses are simply not at the level employers need them to be such that they are useful in the workplace and as a result, many find getting a work placement difficult and drift into other non-skilled roles outside of industry.
This is because the courses are not fit for purpose:
T Levels were introduced in September 2020 as an alternative to A Levels (Level 3) for those seeking a technical qualification.
Since 2021 there has been a T Level in onsite construction available, which focuses on practical skills in areas like bricklaying, carpentry and joinery, plastering, and painting and decorating. Although still a new route, uptake has been relatively low.
In the 2022/23 and 2023/24 academic year, over 10,000 students undertook a T Level qualification. However, only 213 of these were in the onsite construction course – just 2% of the student base and a tiny proportion of the numbers we need to see to address the skills gap.
The industry stands ready to support the Government housing ambitions and to support with the training, recruitment and retention of the workforce. Government should work with the home building industry to implement the sector plan and create a blueprint of how we recruit enough key trades to deliver new homes target.
The key changes we need to see are: