A man teaching an apprentice

Apprenticeship Levy has failed on every measure, says CIPD

As the Apprenticeship Levy nears its fourth anniversary, an assessment of its performance by the CIPD on key measures over the period is damning. Analysis by the professional body for HR and people development has shown that, since its inception, employer investment in training has declined, overall apprenticeship starts have fallen and far fewer apprenticeships have gone to young people. 
 
The CIPD urged the government to announce it was reforming the apprenticeship levy into a more flexible training levy in the Budget last week, to boost employer investment in workforce skills and help the economy recover. 

In fact, the apprenticeship hiring incentive in England has been extended to September 2021, and the payment has been doubled to £3,000. A new £7m ‘flexi-job’ apprenticeship programme in England was also announced, enabling apprentices to work with a number of employers in one sector, while an additional £126m will go towards 40,000 more traineeships for 16-24-year-olds.

However, Neil Carberry, Chief Executive of the REC, expressed disappointment that there was no wider reformation of what he describes as the “failed” apprenticeship levy.  He said:

“A flexible skills levy would deliver better apprenticeships for young people and allow older workers to do the qualifications they need, rather than the ones government is willing to fund."

Key data used for the CIPD’s four-year performance assessment of the levy shows that:  

  • Total apprenticeship starts have fallen from 494,900 in 2016/17 to just 322,500 in 2019/20. 
     
  • The number of apprenticeships going to under 19s has fallen from 122,800 in 2016/17 year to just 76,300 in 2019/20. 
     
  • The number of apprenticeships going to 19-24-year-olds has declined from 142,200 per year to 95,300 per annum over the same period. 
     
  • Overall employer investment in training, which the levy was supposed to boost, has also declined, with employer funded off-the-job training in England falling by £2.3bn between 2017 and 2019. 
     
  • The current funding arrangements are also failing smaller organisations. In 2016, 11% of small businesses (fewer than 50 employees) had apprentices in their organisations, but by 2019 this had fallen to just 9%. 

 

Putting staff through apprenticeships is a great way for employers to prepare them for a significant future in their business, by utilising government funding to gain internationally recognised qualifications. Yet the CIPD believes that, without reform, the levy will have further damaging effects on investment in skills by:   

  • Further restricting apprenticeship opportunities for young people at a time they are most needed. 
     
  • Undermining the government’s Skills for Jobs further education reforms and the plan to boost employer engagement with colleges. 
     
  • Reducing employers’ ability to invest in the skills their business needs for the recovery. 

 

This last point is reinforced by a new large-scale CIPD survey of 2,000 organisations by YouGov on behalf of the CIPD which shows nearly half of large employers say that reforming the levy to a more flexible training levy would help them improve workplace productivity and business performance to either a great (23%) or a moderate (23%) extent. Just 13% of large firms employing 250 or more staff said reforming the levy in this way would have no impact on productivity or performance.  
 
CIPD Chief Executive, Peter Cheese, said:

"On all key measures the apprenticeship levy has failed and is even acting to constrain firms’ investment in apprenticeships and skills more broadly. It appears to have achieved the opposite of its policy objectives. Without reform it will act as a handbrake on employer investment in skills, damaging firms’ ability to recover from the pandemic.

"A more flexible skills levy would mean employers could use it to develop existing staff through other forms of accredited training and skills development which are cheaper and usually much more suitable for employees aged 25 and over, leaving more money to invest in apprenticeships for young people who most need them.

"Levy flexibility would also help employers fund their employees through training in further education colleges as many technical and vocational courses are not apprenticeships. This key change would provide a big boost to meeting the ambition of the government Skills for Jobs white paper and boost employer engagement with their local colleges."