We need more focus on Apprenticeships

RC
29 May 2024
Apprenticeships

The number of starting apprenticeships in Derbyshire Dales has fallen by over 32% since 2015/16.

- In Derbyshire Dales, there were 200 fewer apprenticeship starts in 2023/23 than the 2015/16

- The number of people starting apprenticeships in Derbyshire Dales has fallen by 32.26% since 2015/16

- Derbyshire Dales’ Liberal Democrats have slammed the Conservatives legacy of failure on apprenticeships and called for the apprenticeship levy to be scrapped

The number of people starting apprenticeships in Derbyshire Dales has fallen by 32.26% since 2015/16, House of Commons Library research analysed by the Liberal Democrats has revealed.

It comes as the Conservatives have announced a new policy to boost the number of apprenticeships despite a decline of 172,000 apprenticeship starts per year in England, a fall of over a third.

The Liberal Democrats committed to increase pay for apprenticeships to at least the minimum wage and for the apprenticeship levy to be scrapped. This was introduced by the Conservative government in April 2017. Under current rules, firms with an annual wage bill of above £3m must set aside 0.5% of their payroll to apprenticeships.

However, many organisations are unable to use the funds, where levy money is then reclaimed by the Treasury if remaining unused for two years. The resultant collapse in people starting apprenticeship is widening the skills shortages, and making it harder to encourage young people into the workforce.

Liberal Democrat spokesperson for Derbyshire Dales, Robert Court said:

Young people across the country are being let down by a Conservative party that has failed to give them the opportunities they deserve and give businesses the flexibility they desperately need.

The declining number of people starting apprenticeships in Derbyshire Dales shows just how badly broken this Conservative government has left our apprenticeship system.

Urgent reform is needed. That’s why the Liberal Democrats committed to increasing the apprenticeship wage to stop treating apprentices as second class workers and to reform the apprenticeship levy to boost numbers and stop the decline we have seen under this Conservative government.”

ENDS

Notes to Editors:

House of Commons Library data can be found here.

 

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