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Businesses 'need training bribes' | |
(about 8 hours later) | |
Employers should be offered a financial incentive to improve the skills of British workers, ex-CBI boss Sir Digby Jones has told the BBC. | |
Sir Digby, who has been appointed the "skills envoy" by the government, said the UK faced a "serious decline" in business due to poorly trained workers. | |
He said the fact that millions of UK adults could not read, write and count properly was a national disaster. | |
He called on Chancellor Gordon Brown to fund the necessary skills training. | |
Sir Digby said it was important to maintain the UK's edge in leading universities, but basic skills in the rest of the population should not be ignored. | |
"We have in the United Kingdom seven million adults who cannot read, write and count and are not functionally literate as an 11-year-old should be," he said. | |
"And we have 11 million adults who cannot add up two three-figure numbers. | |
"This a national disgrace for the fifth biggest economy on earth to have that statistic happening in our society today." | |
Leitch review | |
Sir Digby was appointed as the "skills envoy" to coincide with the publication of the government-commissioned review - led by Lord Leitch - into Britain's skills needs. | Sir Digby was appointed as the "skills envoy" to coincide with the publication of the government-commissioned review - led by Lord Leitch - into Britain's skills needs. |
That review warned that Britain was "on track for undistinguished mediocrity" if it failed to upgrade the skills of the workforce. | That review warned that Britain was "on track for undistinguished mediocrity" if it failed to upgrade the skills of the workforce. |
In the first indication of how he will tackle this challenge, Sir Digby said the government must offer a "fiscal bribe", through tax incentives to employers, especially small businesses, to get them to train their staff. | In the first indication of how he will tackle this challenge, Sir Digby said the government must offer a "fiscal bribe", through tax incentives to employers, especially small businesses, to get them to train their staff. |
He said adequate skills training was not about businesses wanting to make more money, rather a matter of social inclusion. | |
Meanwhile, a study from the international business school, INSEAD, due to be published, suggests Britain's ability to innovate economically could be hampered by its "relatively poor skill levels". | Meanwhile, a study from the international business school, INSEAD, due to be published, suggests Britain's ability to innovate economically could be hampered by its "relatively poor skill levels". |
The study puts Britain in 16th place on an international table measuring countries' "human capacity". | The study puts Britain in 16th place on an international table measuring countries' "human capacity". |
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