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Thursday, 6 September 2007

20,000 Property & Construction Jobs Unfilled


Around 20,000 construction and engineering jobs remain unfilled, according to a damning new report by the The Association for Consultancy and Engineering (ACE) on skill shortages. It also found that a further 2,400 vacancies were expected in the next 12 months.

The comprehensive report has been produced from the results of a survey sent by ACE to the industry to examine the extent of the skills crisis. The review highlights the shortfall of high-calibre graduates joining the profession and predicts that skills shortages will worsen in the lead up to 2012 if action is not taken.

The report sets out the full range of recruitment challenges and criticises the unethical behaviour of recruitment consultants. A staggering 80% of respondents said recruitment agencies provide an “average to poor quality” service. It also condemns the artificial market created by unscrupulous practices including poaching staff within six months of placing them.
ACE chief executive Nelson Ogunshakin said: “The Review confirms that recruitment and staff retention is a serious issue affecting our sector. ACE will be taking steps to address the issues raised, including plans for the introduction of a Recruitment Agency Charter, the development of a recruitment portal, and the implementation of a new ACE Business Academy in 2008.”
The organisation will also continue to lobby Work Permit UK to recognise engineering in the skills shortage category and open up a dialogue with the Recruitment Employment Confederation (REC). The report will be released on 18 September 2007.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Firstly - It's illegal for agencies to poach staff after placing them. What's needed - is some regulation of agencies. Once upon a time there was a licencing system - but it was abandoned in the late 80s.

The 80-20 rule lives on! 20% of agencies may be doing an above average job hopefully - but I doubt it's that high!

Come on! There's been a skills shortage for a very long time. The best companies have a chance - but only if they really pay attention to their recruiting practices - and use the right agencies and other innovative methods.

Sorry for the rant, but some of us in the recruitment industry are dissapointed at the low standards set by many!

Jim Roach (FREC)
ARV Solutions
www.arvsolutions.co.uk

 
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