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Apprenticeships Are at the Heart of the Economy We Want to Build

Posted: 6/02/2012 23:00

Over the past 18 months we've put a massive amount of effort and investment into strengthening apprenticeships in this country - and it shows. Last year more than 450,000 people started an apprenticeship, roughly the same number as those who started in higher education. The increase on the previous year is a whopping 63%. These are record numbers to reflect a real commitment.

The reason for that commitment is simple - apprenticeships are right at the heart of the kind of economy we want to build: one where many more young people have the chance to learn a proper trade; where we have a highly-skilled workforce; where we're not just borrowing and spending huge amounts but really earning our way, making and selling the goods the world wants to buy. Apprenticeships are a vital thread running through this vision.

So we have massively increased investment to over £1.5 billion - and today we announce three more important steps we're taking.

First, we're opening the second round of bidding for the Higher Apprenticeship Fund. This fund has a very clear purpose: to increase the number of apprenticeships available at the highest level. For far too long academic subjects have been elevated above practical learning and these rigorous, well-respected qualifications - equivalent to a traditional degree - are going to help end that imbalance. We're looking to see new higher-level apprenticeships in fields like engineering, aerospace and renewable technologies, and to that end we've got £6 million of funding available. Now we want businesses, universities and training providers to start putting their bids together to make this a reality.

Second, we're launching new incentives to encourage small businesses to take on apprentices. The benefits of doing so are proven and overwhelming: you get loyal staff; you train them as you wish; and you recoup your investment rapidly. You just need to look at the board of Rolls Royce - where half of them started as apprentices - to see the business case for doing this. But still, not enough small businesses go this route, which is why we're offering new financial rewards. From today, if you're a small or medium-sized business without any apprentices, and you hire one aged 16-24, then you're eligible for £1500. So if you're reading this and you fit the bill, get hiring - there are 40,000 payments to be snapped up. Find out more about it here.

Third, we're giving employers more control over training. Instead of mainly streaming the money through training providers we're going to give it straight to employers, putting them in the driving seat to commission or develop their own training. There is £250 million in the pot to achieve this - and today we're detailing how employers can get a share of this and get the skills they need. Read more about how to bid here.

If we want an economy that is truly world-class, high-skilled and open for everyone willing to work hard, then we have got to keep putting our efforts into strengthening apprenticeships with bold measures like this. That's what this government is pledged to do.

 

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Over the past 18 months we've put a massive amount of effort and investment into strengthening apprenticeships in this country - and it shows. Last year more than 450,000 people started an apprentices...
Over the past 18 months we've put a massive amount of effort and investment into strengthening apprenticeships in this country - and it shows. Last year more than 450,000 people started an apprentices...
 
 
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jbad
Eeny,meeny,miney Moe, It's always Moe
02:25 AM on 02/13/2012
One of the first apprenticeships to be filled s/b Deputy of Communication. Sack Andy Coulson now because he's tainted w scandal. Fill the position w someone of integrity.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
02:08 AM on 02/13/2012
Sorry, no free slave labor.
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09:37 PM on 02/14/2012
Genders
Well said, one apprenticeships meant the route into a skilled trade like electrician, engineer, plumber etc....now it just means working in a completely unskilled job stacking shelves for £2.50 an hour adult rate for "apprentices" so your employer can swerve the legal min wage then its back on the dole once you qualiffy.
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Mark Knudsen
12:11 AM on 02/13/2012
part two from below
you may be able to make money..but you cant eat it..you cn't wear it...you can't drive it to work and you can't run you dollars in you businnes and make the wheels turn...some of you can't even make change unless the cash box tells yoou how much and you'l gots a collage edgy-k tion.....what for.....if you burnt your deploma it wound n ot even keep you warm on a fall evening///the oldviking
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Mark Knudsen
11:56 PM on 02/12/2012
Yah in this country US we have too many people that make their living pushing buttons on a key board just pilling rocks on this side of the fence today..than throwing them back the next..and don't know how to build or make anything and those that do are retired dead or in chaina if we here had to survive on our own we could not with out a long delay of finding and training a new work force..what happened to the advice from Wall Street..."Don't put all your eggs in one basket"...early on set alshimers...the stupid old viking that can't spell
08:10 PM on 02/12/2012
I am 61 years old and have been in engineering all my life.I would like to ask who is going to train these apprenticies.there has been no apprentiship since i went through the system at 17 to 21 years of age .I finished an apprentiship and joined the merchant navy. I was away at sea till i was over 40 years old rising to the rank of 2nd engineer a post I held for approx 15 years. I am still in engineering recently changing jobs to a company who can respect my abilities and experience gained in a life time of engineering who is going to train the trainers?? The uk has no manufacturing base where are the positions for these young people we do not make anything any more all industry has been undercut by the likes of china who do not have to abide with human rights and use slave labour if you go to prison you work
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Mark Knudsen
12:15 AM on 02/13/2012
good on you see my comments just above yours...I fan you for speaking up..those with higher learning arn't listening...some body better..and soon have a nice day my friend whereeever you are
04:45 PM on 02/12/2012
This appears to be very similar to the programs that Germany has in place. The ones in Germany has been extemely successful. For such programs to work however, you must have two things, (1) industries to employ the apprentice and (2) a willing apprentice. Obviously Germany has both. Perhaps the UK also has them. But I can say in very general terms America is in very short supply of the willing apprentice. They are much too busy playing flying gazelles on their i-phones. If we want a society of great numbers of productive people, we have to start at a very early age and build a work ethic that is not rooted in the attitude of TGIF. If we as adults enshrine a philosophy of play instead of work, it is unreasonable to expect our children to want to apprentice under someone in order to know how to work. This Sunday Americans should collectively begin their prayers with the one asking God to please make sure that the world has an insatiable need for insurance salesman, investment bankers, lawyers, accountants, athletes and yes, flying gazelle players because that pretty much is the expectation of our would-be apprentices.
04:51 PM on 02/12/2012
i disgree with your apprentice assesment in the us. We used to have trade schools, not everyone is capable or needed to have a 4 year increasingly expensive college education. There has been an uptick recently in soem apprectice trades schools. our education system all but discarded this function. So many young people flounder, some going into community coleges etc. We should start training them earleir, at 16 or so. Mechanics, plumbers, etc.
09:30 PM on 02/12/2012
I appreciate your position, but trade schools, however valuable they may be, is not apprenticing. To be an apprentice means that you actually work under a master at his or her trade. You don't earn the big bucks now or even in the near future, but you do have a job and you can progress. I do believe that my generalization about US young people does hold water. They want to have fun and they do not view work as fun. They all want to get paid (and this is true of many adults) but they don't necessarily believe there really has to be a connection between getting paid and working. I do agree that we should be training them, but as a generalization, I don't believe they want to be trained. Playing flying gazelles or flashing chickens is what they want to do. I also know that there are some exceptions....but they are too few to be noticed or have any impact.
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Mark Knudsen
12:24 AM on 02/13/2012
this all change when the russians put sputnic up..we need collage people ..that was the push and trades people were look on as second class...if you werent good enough to go to collage..you go work with your hand and eek out a living'''our elets reunind to pride of making things ..that was just for them over there we were the important ones...welll you will find out when there are few to do you asking ..whho going to make you suit...cut yoy hair make your shoes..buld a house that is good and works..who is going to just plain take cre if you who will feed you hey........you upper crust ones have not figured it out yet no man is an island it take us all..if it werent for crazies like me a shrink would not have a job would he and if there werent shrinks..who do you think would keep Donald Trump sane..better join hands or we will all go down together...what say you wise ones with morter board on your head and a hood on your robe I jus got me a one room school house edgy-k tion hep me out
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03:40 PM on 02/12/2012
It appears that the money is only available to existing businesses that want to train workers.
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Mark Knudsen
12:27 AM on 02/13/2012
trhey don't need more workers in some cases they got robits running 24-7....what they need is skilled people to keep the robits running and you cn't make the parts with a computer unless yor smart enough to program the computer to make the part..that some one made origanally who is dead now
01:57 PM on 02/12/2012
I'd like to know what apprenticeships there are going to be as we no longer have any industry for people to go into, thanks to Maggie Thatcher who got rid of all our industry in the 80's
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David Daisy May Boldock
Yorkshire..Gods Own Country
04:47 PM on 02/12/2012
We can knock down a few million houses and build slums!
06:31 PM on 02/12/2012
There are plenty of manufacturers in this country in engineering and other areas such as food manufacturing that need and want apprentices - in my job I have visited dozens of them. Apprenticeships are not only about manufacturing either - there are about 200 types of Apprenticeship frameworks in total in just about any occupational area you care to mention. Schools have a huge role to play in encouraging young people to go for apprenticeships rather than push them all into university. The ageing workforce is another issue which Apprenticeships will also solve so that the country has the skilled workforce it needs in the future.
09:38 PM on 02/12/2012
It depends on what you call apprenticeships, if you call going to college for 1 to 3 months and then being declared a Plumber or an Electrician I don't think so. These jobs used to take anything from 3 to 7 years. There are no longer any ship builders, cotton mills, carpet mills and steel works etc. We have become a nation of IT specialists and bankers. I am all for apprenticeships but we need more industry for our youngsters to go into
12:24 PM on 02/12/2012
Sure you are Dave

Apprenticeships for sectors of the economy destroyed by Thatcherite policies.
11:38 AM on 02/12/2012
You cannot educate people for jobs that don't exist. This is the fuel a revolution. Expectation with restrictions equals frustration. The simple rule is ---to create jobs you need businesses, to create businesses you need entrepreneurs, to get entrepreneurs you need more government support and less governmennt restictions and interferance. When you have entrepreneurs developing businesses, demand for apprenticeships will outstrip supply. Demand for labour will push up salaries, wealth will be created and the government will have more income from tax.
Unfortunately this government thinks you can pick fruit of seeds without growing the trees first.
WE NEED MORE GROWTH AND A LOT LESS POLITICAL FERTILISER
10:12 AM on 02/12/2012
Our problems are not being solved by a supermarket promoting its check-out operators to retail apprentices. (Does this allow them to dodge the minimum wage legislation?) The emp[loyer may get a few £million from the taxpayer to further inflate their profits but it does not create a single job. The first target of any Tory government to achieve is 3m unemployed. That will put the oiks in their place. I can remenber 50 years ago semi-detached Conservatives holding forth in the pub's smoke room that the country will never do any good until there are 3 of them queuing for each job. 3 of them note, not 3 of us. Fifty years later the Tories have nothing new to offer but "trickle down" economy. Make the rich even richer and crumbs will drop from their table to the lower orders. Not true, they just buy a bigger table.
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Mark B Robertson
10:56 PM on 02/11/2012
I agree bizarre subjects such as PPE at Oxford have been elevated above practical subjects like life, and definitely have not contributed to betterment of British society. We have an infestation currently in the top layers of our government.
The sooner we Scots get away from this twit the better. Keep working for Alex!!!
04:27 PM on 02/09/2012
Should not David Cameron be speaking to Thatcher? It was she who got rid of apprenticeships, ran down UK manufacturing, deregulated the banking system and various other wonderful achievements. Perhaps, for example, he could ask her how to put it all together again!! Or is this unpleasant history and better not brought up in polite conversation?
04:52 PM on 02/12/2012
sound like REAGAN, who just loved maggie. Know our country is in a world of hurt
10:19 AM on 02/09/2012
Apprentices are not going to happen unless you can pay them a proper wage. When I started work, I had to live on £2.85 an hour when my friends from school were on £5. I was operating machinery and they were sweeping up. What really pisses you off is when they tell you that when your working on a particular machine, they are charging the customer £70 per hour.

Firms now adays CAN'T afford to take apprentices on because they are paying you to learn but you need to work with a time served employee so in turn loosing PRODUCTION.

At least make is viable for to be apprentices and not be thinking "I wish I got more money else where"
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MISTERWRITER
Author- Screenwriter - Publisher - Reporter
07:07 PM on 02/08/2012
This is what I believe American Juniors and Seniors should be doing.