Manufacturers have little faith in government to plug growing skills shortage as crisis deepens
The report, conducted by personalised workwear, uniform and PPE supplier MyWorkwear, canvassed 107 companies, with 62% of firms suffering from an acute skills shortage and, worryingly, just 38% believing the government will be able to take action to solve the crisis.
A new study of manufacturing leaders has revealed a worrying ‘skills gap' picture with two thirds believing the picture has got worse in the last six months.
The report, conducted by personalised workwear, uniform and PPE supplier MyWorkwear, canvassed 107 companies, with 62% of firms suffering from an acute skills shortage and, worryingly, just 38% believing the government will be able to take action to solve the crisis.
The results revealed that over half (52%) admitted that they are struggling to recruit or retain existing staff, whilst, going against popular opinion, over three quarters (76%) of respondents thought the Employment Rights Bill will have a positive impact on the current skills landscape.
Other findings from the survey suggested that more industry specific training would help, and this was closely followed by a quarter of firms calling for closer links with education.
As a branded workwear provider - who partners with businesses in fifteen different sectors - MyWorkwear is seeing the impact of the skills shortage firsthand through customer ordering patterns and day-to-day conversations.
"Having been in business since 1976 and working with so many industries, we often pick up trends across a wide variety of sectors, and the skills shortage is definitely something impacting a large majority of manufacturers," explained James Worthington, Co-Managing Director at MyWorkwear.
"There is little confidence from industry that the government's approach will solve the crisis we're seeing, and this is undermining confidence with 66% feeling the situation has worsened over the last six months. You can't really make the most of new opportunities, if you don't have the talent in place to meet customer requirements."
He continued: "A lot of the measures introduced have fallen on deaf ears so far and I believe there's a lot of scepticism around the latest Industrial Strategy and whether it will actually benefit small to medium-sized company."
The MyWorkwear report did show some positivity for the workwear industry, with almost 80% of businesses stating that branded workwear boosts employee pride and 68% indicating that it helps them to retain staff in what is a very volatile jobs market.
For further information or to access the full survey, please visit: https://www.myworkwear.co.uk/content/86-the-myworkwear-skills-shortage
About MyWorkwear
MyWorkwear produces embroidered and printed clothing for companies across the UK.
The 38-strong team produces thousands of garments per week using state-of-the-art embroidery and heat transfer machines to add logos, names and designs onto uniforms, workwear, teamwear, promotional items and other garments, as well as supplying PPE and non-personalised clothing and accessories.
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