Impact of labour shortages worsen for engineering services
Contents |
[edit] Industry survey
The latest engineering services industry survey, backed by leading trade bodies ECA, BESA, SELECT and SNIPEF, shows the growing impact rising labour shortages are having on business owners in the sector. This is having a clear knock-on effect on their business performance.
Almost half (42%) of respondents said labour shortages were the biggest concern for their businesses – up from a quarter (26%) in Q3 2022 and a third (32%) in Q4 2022.
Worries about cash-flow and payment times persist – almost a quarter (23%) of respondents expect their turnover to decrease in Q2 2023, and 40% expect it to stagnate.
While many respondents’ businesses saw revenues rise over the winter, with 40% reporting an increase in turnover between Q4 2022 and Q1 2023, optimism may be offset by the fact that two thirds (59%) of SMEs said that between 1 and 5% of their turnover is currently being held in retentions – a notable increase from an already worrying 53% when last surveyed in January 2023.
[edit] Comments
ECA Director of Legal and Business Rob Driscoll said,
“The construction sector is feeling the impact of events that were set in motion following the Brexit vote, the pandemic, and the war in Ukraine. Right now, we are coming to the end of fixed price contracts which have seen firms squeezed by inflation rates of more than 23 percent on materials.Rising interest rates have caused a crash in the private housing sector, inflation has reduced spending in the public sector, and infrastructure costs are being reviewed . Increasingly, payments are being delayed to shore up finances when bank lending becomes unaffordable or unavailable. SMEs unfortunately sit at the sharp end of these factors. They lack the financial cushioning that allows bigger players to ride out these adverse business conditions. Despite this, the M&E sector remains resilient as RMI increases and construction drops.”
BESA Director of Legal and Commercial Debbie Petford said,
"The picture painted by our latest survey illustrates the direct link between cashflow and business optimism. Retentions and late payment are a serious drag on business growth which is exacerbated by the skills shortage. The fact that firms have a high number of vacancies shows there is plenty of pent-up demand for building services expertise, but firms are struggling to find suitably qualified staff and are too busy chasing payment to be able to fully invest in training, recruitment and staff retention. As usual, we find ourselves praising contractors' resilience in the face of these challenges, but we need more action from government to address the continuing curse of late payment. Freeing up cashflow would allow SMEs to dedicate more time and resource to things that matter to the wider economy like improving our built environment and delivering net zero”.
Over half (54%) of sector businesses reported vacancies in their organisations. When asked why they had trouble filling these vacancies, most businesses (54%) cited an insufficient supply of applicants, followed by a lack of appropriate skills (48%) and unaffordable pay expectations (43%).
[edit] Survey details
142 engineering services businesses responded to the Q1 2023 Building Engineering Business Survey (BEBS), which asked about their business performance in Q1 2023 and their expectations for Q2 2023 and beyond.
The survey was carried out in partnership with industry trade bodies BESA, SELECT, and SNIPEF, who together represent over 6,000 businesses of all sizes across the built environment sector, and is sponsored by Scolmore.
The survey ran from April 18 to May 2, 2023.
This article was issued via Press Release and ECA website news as "Impact of labour shortages worsen for engineering services " dated may 22, 2023.
--ECA
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- Apprenticeships levy.
- CIOB responds to skills strategy for Northern Ireland.
- Construction Industry Training Board CITB.
- Consultancy vs contingent labour.
- Diversity in the construction industry.
- Engineering services and industry recovery guide.
- Flexible working in engineering services.
- Is social media the new way to plug the gender skills gap?
- National Infrastructure Plan for Skills.
- Protection for apprenticeships.
- Skilled workforce unable to meet net zero ambitions.
- Skills shortage.
- Skills shortage and Brexit.
- Skills shortages lead to wages rise.
- Skills strategy for Northern Ireland.
- Student resources.
- Tackling the construction skills shortage.
Featured articles and news
Gregor Harvie argues that AI is state-sanctioned theft of IP.
Many resources for visitors aswell as new features for members.
Using technology to empower communities
The Community data platform; capturing the DNA of a place and fostering participation, for better design.
Heat pump and wind turbine sound calculations for PDRs
MCS publish updated sound calculation standards for permitted development installations.
Homes England creates largest housing-led site in the North
Successful, 34 hectare land acquisition with the residential allocation now completed.
Scottish apprenticeship training proposals
General support although better accountability and transparency is sought.
The history of building regulations
A story of belated action in response to crisis.
Moisture, fire safety and emerging trends in living walls
How wet is your wall?
Current policy explained and newly published consultation by the UK and Welsh Governments.
British architecture 1919–39. Book review.
Conservation of listed prefabs in Moseley.
Energy industry calls for urgent reform.
Heritage staff wellbeing at work survey.
A five minute introduction.
50th Golden anniversary ECA Edmundson apprentice award
Showcasing the very best electrotechnical and engineering services for half a century.
Welsh government consults on HRBs and reg changes
Seeking feedback on a new regulatory regime and a broad range of issues.
CIOB Client Guide (2nd edition) March 2025
Free download covering statutory dutyholder roles under the Building Safety Act and much more.