SKILLED WORKERS PLUMMET IN EDEN-MONARO UNDER COALITION

SKILLED WORKERS PLUMMET IN EDEN-MONARO UNDER COALITION Main Image

15 February 2022

RICHARD MARLES MP
DEPUTY LEADER OF THE AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY
SHADOW MINISTER FOR NATIONAL RECONSTRUCTION, EMPLOYMENT, SKILLS AND SMALL BUSINESS
SHADOW MINISTER FOR SCIENCE
MEMBER FOR CORIO

KRISTY MCBAIN MP
MEMBER FOR EDEN-MONARO

 

The Coalition’s neglect of the skills sector has been entrenched for too long, with plummeting apprentice and trainee completions leaving too many businesses in the Eden-Monaro short-staffed.

The number of people who complete their qualification should be the one of the most important tests of a government and its record on apprentices and trainees.

Under the former Labor Government, more than one million Australians completed their apprenticeships and traineeships in six years. Over the same period, the Coalition have struggled to see more than 500,000.

Right here in the Eden-Monaro, the local numbers reflect this story, with more than 5,500 completing their apprenticeship and traineeships under the former Labor Government, compared to just 2,922 completions in the same period of time under the Coalition.

These numbers reflect a plummet of nearly 50 per cent of skilled workers across Eden Monaro.

The drop in the number of apprentice and trainee completions has left many businesses in the lurch, crying out for more skilled and qualified staff that don’t exist.

The Coalition is responsible for the skills crisis we are facing today and band-aid solutions will not undo almost a decade of damage.

Every one of the 500,000 fewer apprentices and trainees completing qualifications is a missed opportunity for the nation after years of neglect the Liberals and Nationals.

The Coalition’s track record on vocational education and TAFE is another example of this Government waiting too long until something is at crisis point to fix.

The Coalition cannot be trusted when it comes to TAFE.

Under Labor’s free TAFE policy, a Labor Government will tackle the skills crisis, fill the crippling skills gap left by the Coalition for those businesses and industries in crisis.

Labor is committed to investing in the jobs of the future whilst the Government is still trying to play catch up for the missing jobs of the past.