China Daily (Hong Kong)

British workers need new skills, study finds

- By JONATHAN POWELL in London jonathan@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Research by the Confederat­ion of British Industry, or CBI, shows nine in 10 employees in the United Kingdom will need new skills by 2030 at a cost of 13 billion pounds ($16.88 billion) a year.

The business lobby group believes the UK must face up to a choice between investment in its people or sustained rates of high unemployme­nt.

The report, based on analysis by McKinsey & Company and titled “Learning for life: funding world class adult education”, said participat­ion in training by those in lower-skilled jobs that are most at risk of automation is 40 percent lower than that for higher-skilled workers.

It said many individual­s at risk of job loss from automation do not think that their roles will be affected by technology, and that smaller enterprise­s face barriers that prevent many of them from increasing investment in training.

The analysis pointed out that workplace training has “flatlined at best in the last decade and needs to increase”.

The report showed that to cope with digitizati­on and automation, 21 million people will need basic digital skills. Critical thinking, leadership, and interperso­nal relations are other areas where British workers will need to receive education, according to the CBI.

Earlier this month, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced the “Lifetime Skills Guarantee” program, which will give adults the chance to take free education courses.

But Carolyn Fairbairn, CBI director-general, said the research shows more needs to be done and that the pandemic had “accelerate­d the need to act now”.

Progressin­g careers

“The right skills strategy can help every worker to progress their careers, drive up living standards and level up the country. We are at a fork in the road that requires urgent and decisive action,” she said.

“The recently announced Lifetime Skills Guarantee is an important step in the right direction, but it is only a start.”

The CBI has set out a package of measures that it argues the government needs to adopt as a first step toward increasing investment in training by businesses, government, and individual­s.

It suggested help should be provided to small businesses to overcome barriers to training investment, and that people must be encouraged to “invest more in their own learning”.

The government has said it will soon outline its plans to build “a high-quality further education system that will provide the skills that individual­s, employers and the economy need to grow and thrive”.

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