In a shocking revelation that promises to knock everyone over backwards with disbelief, the U.K. building industry’s leaders have warned that Britain doesn’t have enough construction workers to create the 1.5 million new homes Labour has insisted it’s going to have built in five years.
The BBC has the story:
Tens of thousands of new recruits are needed for bricklaying, groundworks and carpentry to get anywhere near the target, they told the BBC.
The Home Builders Federation (HBF), along with the U.K.’s largest housebuilder Barratt Redrow said skills shortages, ageing workers and Brexit were some of the factors behind the shrinking workforce.
The Government confirmed there was a “dire shortage” of construction workers but said it was “taking steps to rectify” the problem.
Last week, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer repeated the pledge he made soon after taking power to deliver 1.5 million new homes in England by 2029.
The pledge means 300,000 new homes a year, ratcheting up from the current figure of about 220,000.
But for every 10,000 new homes to be built, the sector needs about 30,000 new recruits across 12 trades, according to the HBF, the trade body for the house building industry in England and Wales.
Based on the Government’s plans, the estimated number of new workers required for some common trades, for example, would be:
- 20,000 bricklayers
- 2,400 plumbers
- 8,000 carpenters
- 3,200 plasterers
- 20,000 groundworkers
- 1,200 tilers
- 2,400 electricians
- 2,400 roofers
- 480 engineers
When asked if there were enough workers currently to build the extra homes, David Thomas, Chief Executive of Barratt Redrow, said: “The short answer is no.”
Of course, if Britain had unlimited suitable land and services, and a vast pool of currently unemployed but trained workers champing at the bit to get stuck in, the story might be a different one. But let’s not forget this is a government expecting simultaneously to carpet the country with solar farms and wind turbines, and also supercharge the manufacturing and installation of heat pumps as well as car charging points.
Millions of people out of work and with no intention of going back to work is part of the problem too. But so is the shortage of skills:
Barratt Redrow boss Mr. Thomas said recruitment had not been helped by a drive in past decades to encourage young people into further education rather than trades.
“If you went back to the 60s and 70s, I think parents, teachers and the government were very happy with the idea that people became trades – electricians, plumbers, bricklayers,” he said.
The average rates of pay for these jobs “are high” but the issue was “more about availability of labour with skills”, he said.
The Telegraph covers the same story, pointing out that 2.5 new homes would need to be completed every minute. Nonetheless:
Matthew Pennycook, the housing minister, has already admitted that delivering the manifesto pledge is “more difficult than expected”, but remained “convinced” it is achievable.
John Cooper, of snagging firm New Home Quality Control, said the drive to build will cause quality control to slip.
He said: “New builds are in such a bad state already as there aren’t enough good quality tradesmen out there to cope.
“So you can only imagine the whole world of mess we’ll be in when housebuilding increases to this degree.
“I don’t see a good end coming to this at all – it’s only going to go downhill. The Government hasn’t thought about how these houses are going to get built.
Then there’s the problem of how building firms can fund the construction projects:
Gareth Belsham, Director of Bloom Building Consultancy, said: “Housebuilding is stuck in reverse.
“Residential construction has contracted for two months in a row and November’s decline was the fastest seen since summer.
“With residential developers still chafing at high interest rates – which make it more expensive for them to buy land and build homes – and patchy consumer demand, the Government’s promise is looking ever more pie in the sky.”
There are plenty of other problems, among them an ageing workforce. The best prediction is that 1.12 million more homes might be built by the end of the Parliament, but it’s anyone’s guess whether they’ll be up to scratch. They’ll also add massively to the load on providing utilities, communications and meeting environmental regulations.
It’s not always possible to predict the future but in this case it’s hardly a challenge. Labour’s comedy house building target is already irrevocably doomed.
The BBC’s story is worth reading in full, and so is the Telegraph’s.
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“The U.K. Doesn’t Have Enough Workers to Build Labour’s 1.5 Million New Homes”
I have made this point numerous times here on DS in the few months that Ranting has been spouting this nonsense.
And Brexit has F A to do with any of this.
I seem to recall that when free movement kicked in there was a rush of trades from the east to come here and make their fortunes. I dont have an axe to grind about the quality and hard working nature. We had some Polish and Lithuanian builders and they worked like trojans, and delivered good quality, but they also undercut local trades and depressed the market for new trainees. Since a lot of them went home, counting their cash, it seems to have left a bit of a shortfall of good locally trained tradesmen.
And the pressure on young people to go to university rather than learn a trade to meet Eminence Blair’s proclamation that 50% of school leavers must go to university, as well as shutting down the polytechnics.
Many of them were sending their money back home so effectively exporting money from the UK economy. Remind me again how immigration benefits us?
Not only that, many were claiming from the British Welfare State …. child benefit and probably Tax credits … for children “left behind” in their own country. No proof of said “children” was required.
We used to be sending One million pounds per month to Poland in Child Benefit payments. Presumably that has increased somewhat in the last ten years.
Few went home.
Yes. The law of supply and demand kicked in. They imported hundreds of thousands of foreign construction workers who were able and prepared to live in houses of multiple-occupancy and who could therefore undercut British construction workers who had to earn enough to pay for their own house/family.
So young people, who might have considered going into one of those trades, worked out that their income would be inadequate to provide a reasonable standard of living and made alternative choices.
Socialism is all about process not outcome. Quotas must be set, fulfilling them isn’t what’s important.
The solution is surely obvious, import 3 million foreigners skilled at building the mud huts which are all we’ll be allowed anyway.
We won’t need electricians because there’ll be no electricity.
Indoor bathing and central heating also a no no for net zero compliance so no plumbers needed either.
I love it when plan comes together!
In all probability.
Yet again the useless leader of the opposition was on television this morning, spouting on about being an engineer. I don’t know why this makes her a better politician than anyone else, but look at her back story and she is no more an engineer than Reeves is an economist. Why does every speech and interview include this tripe, it’s as bad as father was a tool maker
Prefabs were built quickly after WW2. They lasted decades and people liked them.
True, and some of them still exist, albeit modernised to some extent depending on the local weather etc. However, they were probably not planned to do that. Even five year plans are too short term for most politicians.
I spent a lot of my state education in temporary classroom huts that were there for decades. I had a spell at a private school and there were none there.
And the Luftwaffe had thoughtfully cleared the land ready for construction.
Agreed. But ‘the Regulations’ wouldn’t permit such buildings nowadays. Single glazed steel frames, lack of insulation, use of asbestos panels and roofing.
Now if you were to give me the job (you would be daft) of providing so many houses quickly I would opt for wooden framed houses with brick or concrete block/render outside skins. The wooden frames could come pre wired and pre plumbed to reduce the skills demand. At a site near me they built the roof structure on the ground and craned it on to the house which was probably safer and quicker.
First job: build the factories to produce the component parts in the quantity required. And that will take some time too. And we will need lorries and JCBs too.
It wouldn’t surprise me if prefab type houses are used to get over this ‘problem’. They can be built in China, shipped over and fitted to their concrete bases, job done. Not much skill needed to join them up to sewerage etc – similar to park homes.
Correct. It’s the only way they will possibly be able to deliver the dwellings they have “promised.” That, or Static Caravans/Park Homes.
Agree, John. And of course modern pre-fab housing would be much better than those old pre-fabs were. New materials are available that weren’t even dreamed of then, no reason why they shouldn’t have double glazing and good insulation and so on. We build houses by having bricklayers build them with tiny bricks stuck together with glue (mortar) rather as if they were being built with Lego – surely we can do better. The whole construction system needs to be rethought – and what’s more, I bet someone has already rethought it somewhere in the world.
But we do have enough workers to build thousands of wind turbines, solar installations and thousands of miles of high-tension transmission cables, pylons, interconnectors?
And it’s not just the labour resource, it’s raw material/component supply, manufacturing, transportation, and there’s another thing… can’t quite think of it… oh yes, capital, money – tax, borrow, print money, I suppose.
The trouble with Socialists is they have no clue about economics and how an economy works… well no clue about anything – if they did they wouldn’t be Socialists.
“But we do have enough workers to build thousands of wind turbines, solar installations and thousands of miles of high-tension transmission cables, pylons, interconnectors?”
No.
For the same reason, I wouldn’t be too concerned about electronic control matrices and the like just yet. Watching my own employer scrabble globally to recruit Control and Instrumentation Engineers has been eye-opening.
Such people are essential for the design, construction and maintenance of such things.
Wot no highly skilled cultural enrichers available?
And no ships to lay subsea cables until after 2030.
So, we could build the numbers of houses promised if we had enough skilled people.
So, we could build the numbers of windfarms promised if we had enough skilled people.
So, we could build the numbers of solar farms promised if we had enough skilled people.
So, we could build the numbers of EV charging points necessary if we had enough skilled people.
So, we could build the necessary power distribution infrastructure if we had enough skilled people available.
But many are working on the HS2 vanity project, extended by Labour.
And then is there are enough concrete, steel, copper, project manager, capital etc.
No sign of joined up thinking here.
(Simultaneously posted with JXB comment)
Details, details…
It’s come to something when an industry is so bad that it spawns companies like “New Home Quality Control”.
But then builders aren’t builder any more, they’ve joined the banks in the industry of finance. Much easier to import cheap labour than train your own.
We hear the complaint that builders are ‘sitting’ in land – so-called land banks. Nobody gives thought to why behind the usual low intellect “profiteering” waiting for land values to go up.
No thought is given to availability of ressources to build, or the Byzantine planning rigmarole… except for wind and solar subsidy harvesting farms.
Some of them are. By us there are going to be 1700 houses and enormous sheds. Been waiting for developers to agree S.106 monies. Don’t seem to be in much of a hurry to settle.
These legalised thefts of money by councils – S106, CIL etc. – are all costs to developers. Having had to sign a S106 myself on selling my house to a developer I know that no money is paid until the ground is broken, by which time I had sold and gone so was not for me to pay.
With the open borders and the 1 million African-Muslim invaders each year, surely, pace the fake news and propaganda, most of these men are engineers, brick layers, plumbers, plasterers, carpenters etc ?
We should be drowning in skill trades people according to the no-borders cult?
A lot of them seem to be pretty handy with bladed instruments, so there is that…
Carpenters then?
Butchers more like…
Now watch the floodgates open even further to let in all and sundry pretending to be a much needed tradesman so they can build houses for their buddies pouring across the border.
Then we’ll need even more houses, so we will need to import even more builders…etc ad infinitum
My thoughts exactly
Weird that. Who would have thought that the decline of traditional apprenticeships would lead to skills shortages?
As for all the other technical projects from which we are to “benefit”, who do they think is going to physically do all of this?
There is a shortage of STEM graduates, not to mention craft trades.
After all, electrical engineering is harder than “Decolonisation of Interpretive Dance” or some of the other “degrees” being offered nowadays…
Today’s university fodder graduates to be late-entry shelf-stackers.
If they’re lucky. It isn’t a stretch to say that shelf stacking could be done by a robot. Many large distribution depots now use robotic pickers to retrieve stock for shipment when it is ordered.
Again though, PLC-controlled, so needs the aforementioned C&I engineers/techs to implement and maintain.
Meanwhile the Education Blob is salivating at the prospect of changing the school curriculum (England and Wales), ridding it of colonial influences, etc. Naturally a review has been launched, but we can sleep easy, because it is “expert-led”. Yes, umpteen Profs of the Sociology of Education will decide the outcome.
Will they be consulting with the construction industry on increasing the supply of toxic males into the building industry?
Oops
Brexit nothing to do with it. We had been importing at rates far above what they say they need and few went home.
We get that many people across the channel in a year +\- Trouble is they are completely untrained.
Undoubtedly lockdowns drive many out if work and no new tradesmen were able to learn.
Given the claims by the elites that immigrants are better people than us the 900,000 bet extra last year and 700,000 year just ended means they can build their own houses in double quick time.
Shame we can’t make bricks or windows.
… “few went home”? Where I was living at the time a lot of Poles went home, not sure how much of that was misrepresentation of Brexit and how much was COVID.
So they need to build 821.9 homes per day and since the Student Union took over they should have completed 109,315 houses. About the only way they will get near the target is by building flats which may well be popular with the incoming immigrants who will occupy them.
…and all those flats will have to be heated by air source heat pumps? Where?
We seem to have enough “economically idle” people around to start training up, but that may take some time – 3-5 years?
And they will be trained by whom, exactly?
Can’t some of those Graduates in Critical Studies retrain as plasterers or carpenters… don’t they know a hawk from a handsaw?
… not enough workers?
Not if they bring in more immigrants…
It’s a bit like the plan to build Nightingale hospitals when there were obviously not enough doctors, nurses etc to staff them.
We desperately need politicians who have some basic common sense and intelligence which seems to be in extraordinarily short supply in the Tory, Labour and Lib Dem camps.
Being labour, they’ll start by recruiting a thousand DEI staff to make sure all the new workers are of the correct colour, their experience is irrelevant!
And who are all these homes for ?
Numbers don’t seem to be a speciality, with this lot….are these the fruits of down grading Maths in school.
Dummies In Charge Of The Toy Store…. & The Toys, Are Humans.