Labour shortages have proved problematic for business across Australia and will continue until migration rates return to pre-pandemic levels. To address that, the Coalition government has unleased $6.5 billion of spending across apprenticeship and training programs.
Apprenticeships Programs
$2.8 billion over five years to increase apprenticeship take up, including $5,000 payments to apprentices over the first two years of their apprenticeship and $15,000 to qualified employers by way of wage subsidies (10% for first and second-year apprentices and 5% for third year).
Example:
Bob is an apprentice doing his Certificate III in Bricklaying. Bob will receive $1,250 every six months for two years to help with the cost of his training. Bob is paid $40,000 a year and therefore his employer, Larry’s Layers, can access payments of $4,000 in his first and second years, and $2,000 in his third year for a total of $10,000 of incentive payments.
The employer cash incentives might seem generous, but they are significantly lower than the 50% subsidy currently available until 30 June 2022. Using the example above, Larry’s Layers is $11,000 worse off under the new scheme.
Priority Skills Training
In conjunction with states and territories, $3.7 billion to deliver an additional 800,000 training places. What this actually means is unknown as state and federal governments must first resolve a new National Skills Agreement.
Targeting specific skilled shortages is admirable and something prior governments have attempted with varying degrees of success. The timing of these skills hitting the labour market will be some way off, but the measures do provide incentives to draw school-leavers away from less-productive university degrees and into vocational education.