A worsening skill shortage could blight hopes that Britain can overcome years of dire productivity performance, potentially denting its economic expansion in future, a survey suggested yesterday.
Weak productivity has been a big problem for advanced nations since the financial crisis and Britain has struggled more than most, potentially limiting how much workers can expect to earn in the future.
Skill shortages in Britain worsened for a fourth consecutive year, and now rank among the most severe in Europe, according to the annual Global Skills Index from recruitment group Hays and consultancy Oxford Economics.
This pushed up wage pressures as employers were forced into a “war for talent” in certain industries like engineering and technology.
While the unemployment rate has fallen to levels last seen before the financial crisis and wage growth has started to recover after years of stagnation, Hays warned the skills gap will create problems unless the government takes action soon.
“UK growth prospects are better than they have been in a long time but employers are facing ever-greater challenges around finding the talent they need,” Hays chief executive Alistair Cox said.
“This can only mean that the productivity challenges we face as a nation will become even more severe,” Cox added that better training, attracting highly skilled workers from overseas and better investment in technology are all part of the solution.
Underlining the challenge facing the government, half of Britain’s companies have had trouble investing in staff and new technology that are needed to improve the country’s weak productivity performance, the Chartered Institute for Personnel Development said on Friday.
Britain’s Conservative government in July unveiled a plan to boost productivity in July, and wants to train up 3 million apprentices by 2020 to fill the skills gap in areas like engineering.
However, many business figures, including Cox, are critical of the government’s immigration policy, which they say deters highly skilled workers from outside the EU, exacerbating the shortage of skills.
A survey from the Recruitment and Employment Confederation earlier this month showed that job placements had been held up by a lack of skilled candidates.
Official figures on productivity for the second quarter are due on Thursday, after it returned to modest growth in the first three months of the year. Output per hour is still around 1 percent lower than its level in early 2008.
The Bank of England is keeping a close eye on wage growth as it mulls the first rate hike in over seven years. The ongoing productivity puzzle could cast doubt over the central bank’s ability to gauge the speed with which pay will rise.
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