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Britain pledges 600 Million Pounds to Address Construction Skills Shortage

Britain pledges 600 Million Pounds to Address Construction Skills Shortage

The UK announced on Saturday that it would invest £775mn to train construction workers, and to help combat severe skills shortages which could undermine the plan to build 1.5m homes by 2029.

The Labour government's strategy for growth is based on improving British infrastructure and housebuilding. Construction accounts for around 6% in the gross domestic product but is a key driver of growth across other sectors.

The Treasury emailed Rachel Reeves on Saturday with comments. "We're determined to get Britain back building, which is why we are fighting the blockers in order to build 1,5 million new homes, and rebuild our road, rail, and energy infrastructure," Reeves stated.

We've overhauled our planning system, which is holding us back. Now we're tackling the shortage of construction workers.

The Brexit vote in 2016 and COVID-19 have exacerbated Britain's struggles to fill construction positions.

According to figures released earlier this week, there were 38 000 construction vacancies during the three-month period ending in February.

A number of skilled workers are approaching retirement age. Construction Products Association estimates the industry will lose up to 500,000 workers, or 25% of its total workforce over the next ten to fifteen years.

The government announced that it would invest 165 million pounds in more construction courses for colleges and 100 million pounds on upskilling existing, new, and returning workers.

The Construction Industry Training Board (which represents the homebuilding and infrastructure sectors) will contribute 32 million pounds extra to fund more than 40,000 industry placements per year over four years.

By 2029, the government hopes to have trained 60,000 bricklayers as well as engineers, carpenters, and electricians.

Reeves will likely announce measures to tighten her belt to get back on course to meet her fiscal rule when she delivers her Spring Statement next Wednesday, alongside new forecasts for the economy and public finances from Britain's Fiscal Watchdog. Reporting by Suban Abdallah; Editing Emelia Sithole Matarise

(source: Reuters)