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UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: [email protected] June 2014 Overview: Will employers engage Apprenticeship Reforms – summary Funding – Trailblazer pilots Consultation – future outcome? APPRENTICESHIP REFORMS
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UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: [email protected]@cityandguilds.com.

Jan 11, 2016

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Page 1: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE

Lawrence RowleyFunding ManagerCity & GuildsEmail: [email protected] 2014

Overview:

• Will employers engage• Apprenticeship Reforms – summary• Funding – Trailblazer pilots• Consultation – future outcome?

APPRENTICESHIP REFORMS

Page 2: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

Over400

Employersalready involved in redesigningApprenticeships

Over1.6m

Apprenticeshipstarts this Parliament. We are committed to delivering at least 2 million.

Over700

Different job roles where you can already do an Apprenticeship.

£117kExtra income earned by someone who completes a Level 3 Apprenticeship

Apprenticeships – Interesting Facts

Amount we invested in Apprenticeships last year

Return for every pound that Government invests in Apprenticeships

£1 £28

84%

Level of employer satisfaction with Apprenticeships

£1.5 bn

Over 220,000

Workplaces already offeringApprenticeships

At least 12 monthsDuration for new Apprenticeships

8 out of 11

Industrial Strategy sectors already covered by our Trailblazers

NewHigherApprenticeshipsIn occupations like space engineer and pilot

49,000Apprenticeships in smaller businesses supported by the Grant for Employers

Over 20,000Apprenticeships pledged during National Apprenticeships Week 2014

By 2017/18

All Apprenticeship starts will be on new employer-led standards

£1.8bn

Added to economy by apprentices

Page 3: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

APPRENTICESHIPS – EMPLOYER ENGAGEMENT

FIGURES -UKCES EMPLOYER SURVEY

Employers invested £42.9b in training in the last 12 months

Around half of this £21.6b was in wages for those being trained

£3.3b was spent on external providers (around £450m to colleges)

66%2013

65%2011

The proportion of

employees trained

55%62%

The number being trained has increased during this time from 55%-62%

Employer spend……

The wage contribution is one reason why many small firms are reluctant to take on apprentices

An average apprentice cost for employers could be £50K in wages and attributed costs over 3 yrs – so new funding reforms in particular 16-18 year olds where a contribution is now required, could be a real barrier.

Page 4: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

EMPLOYER ENGAGEMENT

Employer engagement – can it succeed(Federation of Small Business view)

Barriers for employers:

•Time - when focused on own business issues

•Costs to run/deliver training

•Perceived lack of expertise

•Employers understandably do not understand the qualification system, particularly with so much change

•Employers know what they don’t want, not too sure that’s the case knowing ‘what they want’ if its not their core business

•Lack of agreement amongst employers, except on the need for employability skills?

THE HOLY GRAIL

Page 5: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

NEW APPRENTICESHIP STANDARDS

SUMMARY OF PROPOSALS

• The new Standards puts the employer in the driving seat

• Increase the quality of Apprenticeships, including a higher expectation of

English and Maths

• Simplify Apprenticeships by introducing standards described simply by

employers – one /two page document

• Employers will have greater control over funding for Apprenticeships,

including the price (negotiating with providers on costs)

• Independent assessment

Page 6: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

TRAILBLAZERS

THEIR ROLE AND TIMELINES

• Trailblazers are leading the way in implementing the reforms.

• Trailblazers are led by large and small employers. They are leading the way in developing new Apprenticeship standards and assessment approaches for key occupations in their sectors.

• Over 400 employers are involved in the Trailblazers so far, who will build on what already exists in the vast majority of cases.

• The Trailblazers will pave the way for full implementation of the reforms during 2015/16 and 2016/17.

• With the aim all new Apprenticeship starts from 2017/18 will be on the new programme.

• As the new standards are developed and agreed, the SFA will cease funding Apprenticeships under former frameworks (how has still to be agreed)

Page 7: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

GOVERNMENT CONTIBUTION

• For clarity, whilst employers will have discretion as to how to use any flat rate payments that they receive, the government will only co-invest in the costs of external training and assessment – in reality no change from current practice

The government will not co-invest in:

• Apprenticeship wages, subsistence, travel to work or places of learning;

• Employers’ internal costs such as line management time, planning, coaching, normal performance management reviews or mentoring;

• The costs of recruitment of apprentices (although employers will continue to have access to support for recruitment through Apprenticeship vacancies);

• Any internal or external training not specifically listed in the standard and/or not covered by external assessment

• The costs of registration with professional bodies

• Restrictions on HE quals

WHATS NOT INCLUDED

Page 8: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

New Apprenticeships

Changes to Assessment

• Apprenticeships will be graded for the first time.

• All new apprenticeships will have an end-point assessment - apprentice will be required to demonstrate competency across the whole standard.

• End-point assessment will be synoptic – assessing skills and knowledge in an integrated way – and will be graded.

• Trailblazers will set out their high level approach to the end-point assessment –what, how and who should assess.

• Successful completion of an apprenticeship will require passing pre-requisite qualifications, as stated on the standard, and passing the end-point assessment.

• Apprenticeships viewed with the same esteem as University.

• All Apprenticeships will last a minimum of 12 months

Page 9: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

New Apprenticeships OVERVIEW

Page 10: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

TRAILBLAZERS

• The first 8 Trailblazers were in the following sectors:

• More than 80 employers are involved in the first phase of Trailblazer projects

• They have successfully produced the first Apprenticeship standards and can be viewed on: www.apprenticeships.org.uk/standards

• Trailblazers will pave the way for full implementation of the reforms during 2015-16 and 2016-17

• The proposal is all new Apprenticeship starts will be on new ‘standards’ by 2017-18

PHASE 1

Aerospace Automotive Digital Industries Electrotechnical

Energy & UtilitiesFinancial Services

Food and Drink Manufacturing

Life &Industrial Sciences

Page 11: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

TRAILBLAZERS

• These are the industries involved in Trailblazers Phase 2

• Anyone interested in getting involved, can email: [email protected]

PHASE 2

Accountancy ActuaryAdult Social

CareAirworthiness

AutomotiveRetail

Aviation Butchery Cinema Civil Service Construction

Conveyancing Craft Dental Health Early YearsEmerging

Technologies

Hair and Beauty HorticultureHospitality and

Tourism Housing Insurance

Land-based Engineering

Law Maritime Media Nursing

PropertyServices Rail Design Retail Travel

Page 12: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

TRAILBLAZER PILOTS – 2014-15

FUNDING OF NEW TRAILBLAZERS

Apprenticeship Funding (Trailblazers) 2014-15

Value 66% Value 33% Additional (incentive) payments Fixed

Banding Government Contribution

EmployerContribution

16-18 Small Firms< 50

Achievementelement

English & Maths

1 £18,000 £9,000 £5,400 £2,700 £2,700 £942

2 £8,000 £4,000 £2,400 £1,200 £1,200 £942

3 £6,000 £3,000 £1,800 £900 £900 £942

4 £3,000 £1,500 £900 £500 £500 £942

5 £2,000 £1,000 £600 £500 £500 £942

• For every £1 that an employer invests in training an apprentice, the Government will pay £2 .

Incentives - for completion (10 per cent), for small businesses (10 per cent and defined as fewer than 50 staff, paid to the employer) and for apprentices aged 16 to18 (20 per cent).

English and maths funding for apprenticeships, worth close to £1,000 per learner, would be in addition to these figures and would come entirely from the government – paid directly to the provider in this case

Providers involved in trials will have to agree on a price with the employer and the employer will have to pay the provider a cash contribution of at least one third of the agreed delivery cost

Page 13: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

TRAILBLAZER FUNDING

WHAT WOULD THE PROVIDER RECEIVE?

Apprenticeship Funding (Trailblazers) 2014-15

Banding Government Contribution

EmployerContribution

Potential Provider Payment

1 £18,000 £9,000 £27,000

2 £8,000 £4,000 £12,000

3 £6,000 £3,000 £9,000

4 £3,000 £1,500 £4,500

5 £2,000 £1,000 £3,000

• Additional payments will depend on size of business, age of individual and English & Maths requirements

• Payment will be buy PAYE or Apprenticeship Credit – this detail has still to be determined (recent consultation)• Apprenticeship Credits – is a system where it would pool government and employer funds in an online account which

employers can use to buy training for their apprentices.

• The government has said it wants employers to shop around so that they might lower their own — and therefore the taxpayers’ — actual contribution

• If the agreed level with a provider is above the maximum government contribution it must come from the employer

Additional Payments:

•16-18

•Small Business

•Achievement

•English and Math’s

Page 14: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

SUMMARY OF BENEFITS

Within the Maximum Government Contribution

  Additional to the Maximum Government Contribution

Proportion of the costs of external training met by government

  Proportion of the costs of external training met by the employer

Proportion of the costs of independent assessment met by government

  Proportion of the costs of independent assessment met by the employer

 

 

  Small business and young person recruitment payments made by government to the employer

  Completion payment made by government to the employer

  Funding for maths, English and support for apprentices with learning difficulties and/or disabilities

QUICK REFERENCE POINT

Page 15: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

EMPLOYER FEE

COST TO EMPLOYER

Banding 1 2 3 4 5

Employer Contribution £1,000 £1,500 £3,000 £4,000 £9,000

Large employer (50+ staff) ‘achieved’ 19+ incentive £500 £500 £900 £1,200 £2,700

Net cost to large employer (50+ staff) -£500 -£1000 -£2,100 -£2,800 -£6,300

Large employer (50+ staff) with 16-18 + achievement incentive - Example band 1 - £500 + £600 = £1,100

£1,100 £1,400 £2,700 £3,600 £8,100

Net cost to large employer (50+ staff) £100 -£100 -£300 -£400 -£900

Small employer (<50 staff) with ‘achieved 19+ incentiveIe £500 + £500 = £1,000

£1,000 £1,000 £1,800 £2,400 £5,400

Net cost to small employer (<50 staff) with completed 19+ £0 -£500 -£1,200 £1,600 -£3,600

Small employer (<50 staff) with achieved +16-18 incentiveIe. £600, £500 + £500 = £1,600

£1,600 £1,900 £3,600 £4,800 £10,800

Net cost to small employer (<50 staff) £600 £400 £600 £800 £1,800

In truth it’s the small employers who will benefit most from the system – a small firm can gain more than their original outlay once the incentives kick in – therefore whilst all the concerns are about small employers if the system is not too bureaucratic the system might just work if sold/marketed in the right way?

Page 16: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

•In the majority of cases most apprenticeships will be in the lower bands – therefore once incentives are taken into consideration small firms will pay no or minimal cash contribution post rebates.

•On average the government currently pays c£3,000 for 19+ apprenticeship with the employer expected to pay 50% - which in practice they never do and c£6,000 for 16-18 year olds.

Examples - using these averages:

•Under new proposals if £6,000 banding (band 3) the government would pay £6,900 for adult in a large firm (£6,000 + £900 achievement) rising to £9,600 for 16-18 year old if also a small company. The employer would make a cash contribution of £3,000 - £2,100 net or - £600 (net cash gain) once incentives paid out and apprentice completes.

•If in £3,000 band the government would pay £3,500 for adults in large firms (£3,000 + £500 achievement) to £4,900 for small firms (all incentives). With a cash contribution of £1,500 if 19+ it’s a net cash payment of £1,000 or if 16-18(small firm) - £400 (net cash gain)

IS IT REALLY A BARRIER?

EMPLOYER FEE

Apprenticeship Funding (Trailblazers) 2014-15

Banding Government Contribution

EmployerContribution

16-18 Small Firms< 50

Achievementelement

English & Maths

3 £6,000 £3,000 £1,800 £900 £900 £942

4 £3,000 £1,500 £900 £500 £500 £942

Page 17: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

TRAILBLAZER FUNDING

There is a lot of debate over the effectiveness of the proposed new funding system for apprenticeships – lets look at some of the concerns/conditions……

•For the new reformed system to work, it should be simple, easy to navigate and the phasing of payments and grants must be designed in a way that does not harm cash flow and it must avoid unnecessary administrative burdens – what’s the chances the government will get this right?

•The ‘one off’ payments are pretty clear and the employer is free to spend these amounts on whatever they wish. This is a bit concerning because they may ‘wish’ to retain all the amounts for internal use, rather than passing a portion on to their provider?

•Over the next few weeks SFA will allocate each of the 11 trailblazer standards to a band – this will make it easier to look at more detailed examples of funding.

•Providers involved in trials will have to agree on a price with the employer and the employer will have to pay the college a cash contribution of at least one third of the agreed delivery cost

•It is hard to envisage how large employers with their own training organisations will behave in negotiating a rate for the job – they will look to maximise any incentives or look to reduce employer payments?

HOW GOOD OR BAD ARE THE NEW FUNDING CONDITIONS

Page 18: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

TRAILBLAZER PILOTS – 2014-15

KEY ISSUES

• The funding rate includes delivery and assessment – split dependant on standards?

• Assessment plans vs delivery requirements could be completely different from current framework – its possible qualifications will not feature (although expected under most standards)

• How will employers view payments to providers if work based and training mostly done on the employers premises by the employer.

• All new Standards will have independent ‘end point’ assessment and grading (forms of grading will vary across standards but seen as an integral element by the government)

• End point assessment will synoptic – assessing skills and knowledge in an integrated way – and will be graded

• How will the delivery model be different and need to adapt to new standards – what support will be required

• Delivery funding can only be paid to a provider who is a direct contract holder on the Register of Training Organisations.

• The government funding will only be released once there is evidence of the employer contribution (precisely what evidence, particularly in the case of employers who deliver directly has yet to be shared)

• It is not necessarily the case that all the money is paid up front, payment schedules are likely to be agreed between the provider and the employer and the government contribution will match the schedule agreed – this might help with cash flow issues?

DELIVERY AND ASSESSMENT ISSUES FOR PROVIDERS

Page 19: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

TRAILBLAZER FUNDING

There is a lot of debate over the effectiveness of the proposed new funding system for apprenticeships – lets look at some of the concerns/conditions……

•Firstly – get used to the name - Maximum Government Contribution (MGC) or the ‘cap’ -sounds like a film company?

•Income and apprentice salaries will not go towards employers’ one-third share of the costs

•In terms of the employer co-investment, or employer co-payment, the government will not change its position this must be a cash contribution.

•Any increase of the administrative burden on small businesses, or any problems with the implementation of the reforms and/or any increase in the overall cost of apprenticeships for small businesses will increase the risk of reducing the volume of apprenticeships, particularly in the short term.

•There is currently no cost to employers for 16 to 18-year-olds, but the new government one-off payment shows they recognise that employers may need support to invest in additional training for young apprentices – it just begs the question why add complexity?

•Matthew Hancock has assured the sector following the consultation the system will be ‘super simple’

•Yet - BIS research has found, there is a risk that setting the employers’ contribution too high will put some businesses off hiring an apprentice – this is one reason for the additional/incentive payments.

•These additional payments could neutralise the cash contribution - not sure all this sounds or looks simple?

HOW GOOD OR BAD ARE THE NEW FUNDING CONDITIONS

Page 20: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

TECHNICAL REFORMS

• How is the final assessment of apprenticeships going to work? - Two thirds of the assessment should be at the end of the programme. The methods of doing these tests can include written tests, assessments, projects and skills tests. Each sector will decide how these assessments will work and how they might fit within qualifications

• Sub – Contracting - If funding goes direct to employers they will decide who to contract with. It should still be possible for a main training contractor to sub-contract with other providers

• Employer Demands - By making a direct financial contribution towards the cost of training, will employers have a greater incentive to demand relevant high-quality training and good value?

• Why would an SME engage -The government intends to offer additional financial support to the smallest businesses that take on apprentices (<50 SMEs) working towards the new standards.

• How will assessment be paid -To give employers on-going leverage over assessment of competence at the end of the Apprenticeship, the costs of assessment will be subject to the same co-investment percentage as external training, and employers will receive the government’s contribution in exactly the same way as delivery through drawdown.

• How are banding calculated -There are 5 bandings with each standard being allocated based solely on the anticipated cost of the external training and assessment needed for the apprentice to achieve the standard.

• How is English and Maths paid – this is paid separate to the MGC (max gov contribution) and will be paid direct to providers.

TYPICAL QUESTIONS

Page 21: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

APPRENTICESHIPS REFORM - CONSULTATION

Funding methods for new Apprenticeship Standards

•Funding Options – PAYE or Apprenticeship Credit (90% of providers and majority of employers rejected the PAYE option in the first consultation)

•An “enforced” employer’s fee for 16 and 17-year-old apprenticeships under the funding reforms could spell the end of the apprenticeships for this age group? It could lead to an 18 to 24 English apprenticeship system?

•What sectors will fall under which banding – should hear by the end of June

•The consultation suggests a simple one-off payment to be awarded to the employer after the apprentice’s first three months.

•In the reformed system, where qualifications form part of the standard, the government will contribute to the costs of qualifications and licences to operate, provided these are required by the standard and they constitute the training required to achieve the standard.

•For clarity, whilst employers will have discretion as to how to use any flat rate payments they receive, the government will only co-invest in the costs of external training and assessment, under a co-investment contribution.

SUMMARY OF KNOWN FUNDING CONDITIONS

Page 22: UPDATE ON FUNDING & POLICY LANDSCAPE Lawrence Rowley Funding Manager City & Guilds Email: lawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.comlawrence.rowley@cityandguilds.com.

QUESTIONS & ANSWER SESSIONTRUST YOU FOUND THE INFORMATION USEFUL

Any Questions