More jobs are available but employers can find fewer workers to do them
The extension of the furlough scheme is contributing to labour shortages within the construction industry, the CITB has warned. Latest official figures show that the scheme was still being used by nearly 170,000 workers, or 13% of the construction workforce, at the end of April.
The scheme, which has been extended until the end of September, was still being used by nearly 73,000 firms at the end of April, 30% of those within the sector.
But the CITB said it was now contributing to a squeeze on labour amid a faster than expected resurgence of demand following the easing of lockdown restrictions.
A spokesperson for the skills body said: 鈥淭here are undoubtedly shortages resulting from workers that are still furloughed.鈥 He added that the shortages were exacerbated by the workers who left the sector as a consequence of the pandemic.鈥
Victoria Short, chief executive at recruitment specialist Randstad, said the scheme was not helping employers to find staff. The number of applicants appeared to be shrinking while the number of vacancies has nearly doubled.
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In the six months between May and November 2020, Randstad posted 43,000 jobs in construction, property and engineering. In the six months between December 2020 and May 2021, that number rose to more than 60,000, an increase of 40%. Meanwhile the number of applications fell by 16% between December and May 2021 compared with the six months before.
The Office for National Statistics said this week that unemployment across all sectors fell to 4.7% in the three months to April, down from 4.8% in the three months to March In construction, the average number of vacancies from March to May this year grew by 23.4% compared with December to February.
Adrian Smith, Randstad鈥檚 senior director of operations, told 好色先生TV that labour shortages had 鈥渞amped up鈥 and that employers were 鈥渃learly struggling鈥 to recruit, although he hoped that applicants would become easier to find following the end of furlough in September.
Emigration during the pandemic and following the introduction of the post-Brexit immigration system is also taking its toll with 1.3m foreign nationals leaving the UK in the past year. Since 2017, there has been a 42% decline in the UK鈥檚 EU construction workforce, according to ONS figures.
In London, which has the highest proportion of EU workers and the decline is 54%, average earnings in construction shot up by 4.5% in May to 拢885 per week, according to data from self-employed payroll provider Hudson Contract. The West Midlands saw weekly earnings for subcontractors increase by 3.5% to 拢920 in May.
Hudson Contract鈥檚 managing director Ian Anfield said the industry was feeling the impact of people leaving the UK ahead of the 30 June deadline for the post-Brexit EU settlement scheme. He said that problems finding workers mirror material shortages, especially in the West Midlands where major infrastructure and building projects for HS2 and the Commonwealth Games are underway.
However, Anfield added: 鈥淟uckily, the construction sector still employs 3.1 million people in the UK so, if you know what you鈥檙e doing, it is still possible to find the right people.鈥
This week, chancellor Rishi Sunak said he would not extend the furlough scheme beyond September despite opposition calls to do so after the government confirmed that it was extending the remaining lockdown restrictions for another four weeks until 19 July.
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