Construction wages and apprenticeships on the rise
In 2014/15, for the second year in a row, the number of people starting construction, planning and the built environment apprenticeships in England rose, reaching 17,820. Although the figure was the highest since 2010/11, it was still considerably lower than 2006/07 when 27,300 people started construction apprenticeships.
The news of increase came as construction industry employment continued to grow at a steady rate with figures from the Office for National Statistics showing a 0.5% rise in construction employees over the previous year, from 2,096,000 to 2,106,000.
For some, this growth in employment and apprenticeship numbers provided evidence of the industry responding to warnings about skills shortages.
Tom Crane, an economist at industry analyst Glenigan said, “The increased numbers of apprenticeships may not solve the skills shortage in the short-term, this will be solved by people coming back from other industries and abroad. However, the statistics suggest that the industry is starting to invest more in the future.
"At the moment I think that the fear of the skill shortage is greater than the actual shortage in labour on the ground. The awareness that has been created may be encouraging companies to plan ahead. If we were to have another year with growth of 4-5% then we would have issues, but growth of 2-3% the industry should be able to handle.”
In addition to these figures, analysis of Labour Market statistics revealed that the average weekly earnings of construction workers in the three months to August 2015 was £593, compared with £557 the year before. This rise by an average of 5.1% was the fastest annual increase in any UK industry, together with an increase of 10,000 jobs since June 2014.
Employment Minister Priti Patel said: “The construction industry is a real success story. More than 2 million people are employed in the sector, and their hard work is resulting in more money in their pay packets. Up and down the country more people are in work and enjoying the security of a pay-cheque, helping transform Britain into a higher wage, lower taxation and lower welfare society.”
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki
Featured articles and news
Reslating an ancient water mill
A rare opportunity to record, study and repair early vernacular roofs.
CIOB Apprentice of the Year 2025/26
Construction apprentice from Lincoln Mia Owen wins this years title.
Insulation solutions with less waste for a circular economy
Rob Firman, Technical and Specification Manager, Polyfoam XPS explains.
Recycled waste plastic in construction
Hierarchy, prevention to disposal, plastic types and approaches.
UK Net Zero Carbon Buildings Standard V1 published
Free-to-access technical standard to enable robust proof of a decarbonising built environment.
Prostate Cancer Awareness Month
Why talking about prostate cancer matters in construction.
The Architectural Technology podcast: Where it's AT
Catch up for free, subscribe and share with your network.
The Association of Consultant Architects recap
A reintroduction and recap of ACA President; Patrick Inglis' Autumn update.
The Home Energy Model and its wrappers
From SAP to HEM, EPC for MEES and FHS assessment wrappers.
Future Homes Standard Essentials launched
Future Homes Hub launches new campaign to help sector prepare for the implementation of new building standards.
Building Safety recap February, 2026
Our regular run-down of key building safety related events of the month.
Planning reform: draft NPPF and industry responses.
Last chance to comment on proposed changes to the NPPF.
A Regency palace of colour and sensation. Book review.


















