In an age of high employment, the 'war for talent' is acute. At the moment, 61% of businesses say that at least one of their current vacancies is hard to fill, and 41% say it has become harder to fill vacancies over the last year. Brexit, whatever form it takes, is likely to only make this more acute. To create the skilled workforce they need, businesses are under increasing pressure to develop it themselves.
'The productivity challenge' sounds technical, but it's pretty simple. As a country, we're working harder, but not smarter. We're working more hours than we were a decade ago, but each hour of work is producing the same amount of value as it did then. Considering the amount of technological change that’s taken place in the last ten years, that’s a real worry.
If we put more time and investment into doing things differently, we might be able to shift this: getting more out of every hour worked, without having to work more hours. To work smarter, we need a more skilled workforce - who can automate tasks, do more high-value activities, and work out new ways of doing things.
Older workers have to be part of this picture. By 2025, there will be around 1 million more workers over 50, and 300,000 fewer workers under 30. Increasingly, the older workforce is the workforce.