º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Developmentopinion

Opinion: Skills are the foundation of a prosperous Manchester economy

Emily Cox, Ambassador for the North at Lloyds Banking Group, on how equipping people with the tools they need to thrive could accelerate Manchester’s growth ambitions

The Manchester skyline viewed from Werneth Low Country Park(Image: Manchester Evening News)

Manchester’s economic growth ambitions begin with skills.

Skilled workers power business growth, which in turn drives the economy and creates the prosperity that will help the city region to reinvest in housing, transport and infrastructure, and improved public services.

It’s a virtuous circle that requires long-term planning and investment, with the pay-off often coming only decades later. But Manchester City Council recognises this – it’s why being a highly-skilled city is one of its five priorities and sits at the heart of its 10-year plan to solve some of its urgent challenges and build a bigger economy.

With its plan for the next decade due to be published soon, it’s likely skills will only take on greater importance. Stats from the Industrial Strategy Council show that around 20 per cent of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ workforce will be significantly under-skilled for their jobs by 2030. It’s essential that we address this gap if Manchester’s ambitions are to be realised.

There are many ways to approach the skills gap – but a fundamental element starts in schools. Businesses aren’t getting the talent through the door that they need to accelerate their growth plans because, often, a traditional academic education doesn’t unlock the ability of many young people. Schemes like T-Levels offer a solution.

Launched in September 2020, they are broadly equivalent to three A-levels and cover topics like Healthcare Science, Finance and Legal Services. The courses include industry placement for a minimum of 45 days, giving students valuable hands-on experience.

This year Lloyds welcomed 140 students onto placements – up from 70 in 2023 – including young people from The Manchester College. The students work alongside mentors on live projects right across our business, including web design and software engineering, giving them the hands-on experience they crave and that many traditional routes of further education don’t offer.

Crucially, unlike many vocational education programmes, T-levels offer a core focus on tech skills. As the world evolves rapidly, the skills the Manchester economy needed yesterday aren’t necessarily those we need today, or tomorrow. In fact, in the World Economic Forum’s 2021 report, it was estimated that 40 per cent of key skills would change in the next five years. So, it’s vital that any focus on skills is constantly evolving to keep pace with the modern world.