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Home›News›Business Matters›CFMEU: Federal Budget short-changes apprentices

CFMEU: Federal Budget short-changes apprentices

By Sean Carroll
May 12, 2021
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The CFMEU has warned that construction apprentices will be short-changed by the Federal Budget announced yesterday, saying it does nothing to improve the declining apprenticeship completion rates and the low take up of apprentices on government jobs.

CFMEU national construction secretary Dave Noonan says the Budget is long on rhetoric but short on genuine investment in future generations of Australian workers.

“The government has failed to address declining apprenticeship completion rates and the low take-up of apprentices on government infrastructure and building projects,” he says.

“While trumpeting an infrastructure investment package that appears to be largely made of previously announced projects, there is no evidence that the government has attached requirements to have a minimum number of apprentices included on government infrastructure projects.”

He adds that the government’s stated support for apprentices is undermined by its continued ban on apprenticeship ratios on infrastructure and federal construction jobs.

“The apprentice wage subsidy extended last night is limited to first year apprentices so will do little to support the completion of apprenticeships which have been declining for years,” he explains.

“The latest data on construction apprenticeship completion rates reveals that less than half the people who commence an apprenticeship will complete it. Of the 22,220 people who commenced a construction apprenticeship in 2016 only around 10,650 had completed it by 2020. The data also reveals construction apprenticeship commencements were 23.5% lower in 2020 compared to 2016.

“The Budget also locks in a long-term drop in spending in vocational education and training, while celebrating a short-term increase in spending in the next financial year. The budget papers reveal a 66.2 per cent decrease in investment in real terms on vocational education and training from 2021 22 to 2024-25.”

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