cover image: Flex and match: a new Skills Levy for growth

Flex and match: a new Skills Levy for growth

6 Jun 2024

The apprenticeship levy should be broadened to a Skills Levy, with greater flex for employers to use their funds for training outside of apprenticeships matched to a maximum of the amount they spend on apprenticeships for young people and capped at up to 50% of the levy. [...] 8 Figure 1: Levy contributions and spending by employers in England8 In recent years, the amount raised by the apprenticeship levy has exceeded the amount allocated to the Department for Education and to the other UK nations. [...] The sharp rise in the following two years is partly related to the ending of Train to Gain (which supported level 2 qualifications in the workplace) – there was some substitution from that to apprenticeships.9 However, since the introduction of the 2017 reforms, the number of apprenticeships has fallen 31%, with the largest falls for young people (-37% for under 19s, -32% for 19–24- year-olds).10. [...] Based on the OBR’s forecasts, and assuming the amount allocated to the Department for Education for apprenticeships rises in line with inflation from 2024-25 onwards, the Government will be raising £1.1 billion more from the levy than it spends on apprenticeships and gives to devolved administrations (the ‘Treasury apprenticeship margin’ – the orange line in the chart) by 2028-29. [...] In this way, the Government could maintain apprenticeship expenditure in real terms, maintain the apprenticeship levy’s net contribution to the public finances, and allow levy payers to spend 15% of their levy payments on qualifications outside of apprenticeships in the three years to 2028-29, raising this thereafter.

Authors

emily.jones

Pages
29
Published in
United Kingdom

Table of Contents