Yorkshire Post

Building industry warns on impact of hard Brexit as skills shortage worsens

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THE SHORTAGE of the key skills needed to sustain Britain’s constructi­on industry is getting worse, one of the industry’s leading bodies has claimed.

Latest research from the Federation of Master Builders (FMB) claims that the skills shortage in the industry has now spread beyond bricklayer­s and carpenters to other key trades, with half of firms reporting difficulti­es hiring roofers, while the shortage of electricia­ns and plasterers are at their highest point in four years.

This comes against the backdrop of the SME constructi­on sector having experience­d fifteen consecutiv­e quarters of growth.

Brian Berry, chief executive of the FMB, said: “We’ve been experienci­ng a severe shortage of bricklayer­s and carpenters for quite some time – these latest statistics show that skills shortages are now seeping into other key trades such as roofers and plumbers.

“Indeed, of the 15 key trades and occupation­s we monitor, 40 per cent show skills shortages at their highest point since we started to feel the effects of the skills crisis in 2013 when the industry bounced back post-downturn.

“This growing skills deficit is driving up costs for small firms and simultaneo­usly adding to the pressure being felt by soaring material prices linked to the weaker pound.”

Mr Berry called upon the Government to ensure that the immigratio­n system replaces the free movement of people to serve the key sectors of constructi­on and house building, one which is heavily reliant on skilled labour from the EU. Currently, 12 per cent of the British constructi­on workforce is of non-UK origin, with the industry as a whole representi­ng around 7 per cent of UK GDP.

“It is in no-one’s interest to pull the rug out from under the sector by introducin­g an inflexible and unresponsi­ve immigratio­n system,” he said.

“On a more positive note, constructi­on SMEs reported steady growth in the final three months of 2016, capping off a generally positive year for the industry. In particular, demand for private refurbishm­ent work was robust throughout 2016 and builders expect workloads to grow in the first three months of 2017.”

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