Solutions to fix construction skills

The Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) has released a report titled, ‘Skills to Build: Fixing Britain’s construction workforce crisis.’ After speaking to several organizations and having roundtables to garner a wide understanding of the sectors’ perspectives and needs, they have proposed twenty six recommendations that will fix the issues underpinning the skills crisis.

Richard Beresford, Chief Executive of the National Federation of Builders (NFB), said: “The CSJ report is a must read for those who want to learn about the challenges and solutions to fix the construction skills crisis. It explores the journey from the perspective of the learner, employer and educator, and does not simply propose that the only solution is more funding.”

‘Skills to Build’ is written in two parts, the first focusing on the construction industry and the second on education and training. Each part has five sections, which introduce the key elements of the review.

Some of the best recommendations for builders include:

Ensuring the planning process enables projects to begin more quickly, so that workforce planning is more stable and sustainable

Support employers by implementing a cross-government review of construction industry regulations.

CITB reform

Embedding high quality employability skills and experiences within secondary education

Pilot a regional construction work experience scheme

Tackle the shortage of construction teachers in Further Education (FE), for example, increasing bursaries for construction, planning and the built environment

Reform benefit rules to incentivise participation in vocational training and work in shortage occupations

Rico Wojtulewicz, Head of Policy and Market Insight and the NFB, said:

“The CSJ have broken the mould when discussing the construction skills crisis. Instead of focussing purely on access to learning, they have understood that learners need teachers with strong industry experience to develop their skills, employers to take them on, and an industry which has a pipeline of work to sustain career progression.

“What firms have access to a pipeline of future work is also important. 8 in 10 construction apprentices are trained by SMEs, despite those firms struggling with work pipelines and project certainty for almost two decades. This is the main reason why the construction skills crisis continues to worsen.

“The right way to fix the skills crisis is, therefore, to unblock work pipelines for SMEs. When they had a fuller pipeline, building 40% of homes in the 1980s, they trained more bricklayers and carpenters per year than all construction apprentices today, where they build just 9% of homes.”

EAN Breaking News

Breaking News from the team at Estate Agent Networking. Have a new story to share with us? Then please get in contact today! When and where we can we will refer to third party websites with a 'live link back' where news was released first.

You May Also Enjoy

Overseas Property

Why 2026 is the Best Year to Invest in Dominican Republic Land

If you’re eyeing Caribbean real estate, 2026 offers an exceptional window to invest in Dominican Republic land. The country has emerged as the fastest-growing Caribbean economy, creating ideal conditions for land investors. Tax incentives, infrastructure projects, and rising international interest are converging at just the right moment. Whether you’re searching for beach land for sale…
Read More
Breaking News

Property expert on how to bag the BEST mortgage deal in today’s market

Finding a good mortgage deal in today’s market demands more than just comparing rates. While the average 2-year and 5-year fixed mortgage rates have gone down this year, they’re still higher than rates pre-pandemic. This means those in their current homes will have to pay more than they once were each month, and new buyers…
Read More
Breaking News

Halloween Named the UK’s Most Popular Moving Day of 2025

Halloween was the most popular day to move house in 2025, breaking the long-standing trend of summer being the busiest time for home moves. We analysed the data and spoke to industry experts to understand why the peak moving day has shifted and why it fell on an international holiday.  Compare My Move reviewed more than 170,000 house moves made in 2025 and…
Read More
for sale sign london
Breaking News

Industry Response to Halifax House Price Index

Industry response to the Halifax House Price Index December 2025 The latest index shows that: – On a monthly basis, house prices fell by 0.6% between November and December of last year. Annually, house prices were up 0.3% versus this time last year, although this annual rate of growth had slowed from 0.7% the previous…
Read More
Breaking News

Halifax House Price Index December 2025

House prices in December 2025 were 0.3% higher compared to the same month a year earlier. UK house prices dipped in December • House prices dipped by -0.6% in December, following a -0.1% fall in November • Average property price is now £297,755, the lowest since June • Annual growth slowed to +0.3%, down from…
Read More
Breaking News

Homebuyer demand returns following Autumn Budget

New research from Property DriveBuy reveals that Bristol, Tyne & Wear, and South Yorkshire emerged as the UK’s most in-demand areas of the housing market following the Autumn Budget, with as many as 61% of homes listed for sale successfully securing a buyer in Q4 2025. Property Drivebuy analysed residential listings data across the nation…
Read More