Close Menu
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Commodities & Futures
    • ETFs & Mutual Funds
    • Funds
    • Currencies
    • Crypto
  • Markets
  • Investing
  • Personal Finance
    • Loans
    • Credit Cards
    • Dept Management
    • Retirement
    • Mortgages
    • Saving
    • Taxes
  • Fintech

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance and business news and updates directly to your inbox.

Trending
What Is A Nonqualified Annuity And How Does It Work?

What Is A Nonqualified Annuity And How Does It Work?

June 19, 2025
Why Americans Are Buying Vacation Rentals in Italy

Why Americans Are Buying Vacation Rentals in Italy

June 19, 2025
Lyft CMO Brian Irving Talks ‘Customer-Obsessed’ Marketing

Lyft CMO Brian Irving Talks ‘Customer-Obsessed’ Marketing

June 19, 2025
Google, XAI, OpenAI Pull Back After Meta’s Scale AI Investment

Google, XAI, OpenAI Pull Back After Meta’s Scale AI Investment

June 19, 2025
Sam Altman Says His Kids Will ‘Never Be Smarter Than AI’

Sam Altman Says His Kids Will ‘Never Be Smarter Than AI’

June 19, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
June 19, 2025 2:53 am EDT
|
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  Market Data
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Commodities & Futures
    • ETFs & Mutual Funds
    • Funds
    • Currencies
    • Crypto
  • Markets
  • Investing
  • Personal Finance
    • Loans
    • Credit Cards
    • Dept Management
    • Retirement
    • Mortgages
    • Saving
    • Taxes
  • Fintech
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
Home » The UK Defense Industry Has a Skills Shortage Just As It’s Ramping up
The UK Defense Industry Has a Skills Shortage Just As It’s Ramping up
Finance

The UK Defense Industry Has a Skills Shortage Just As It’s Ramping up

News RoomBy News RoomMay 27, 20250 ViewsNo Comments

When Calvin Bailey — a member of the UK parliament — was a squadron commander in the country’s Royal Air Force, he saw a shift in how his engineering-heavy workforce changed careers.

In the early 2010s, people would leave the service “like for like,” he told Business Insider — meaning they were leaving the military for complementary roles in the defense and aerospace industry.

However, by around 2017, he said, a new sprawl of high-tech companies and major infrastructure projects created a demand for skills that the military had nurtured, such as robotics, advanced engineering, and logistics.

Bailey wrote in a recent piece for War on the Rocks that he watched as the military “hemorrhaged” certified aircraft engineers.

“I found myself competing with unlikely adversaries: Amazon logistics hubs,” he wrote.

As the UK attempts to redress the effects of decades of reduced military spending, it’s not just a steep price tag that has experts worried. It’s a shrunken — and highly competitive — skills pipeline.

Bailey still doesn’t think the UK is spending enough, he told BI. But even if the country throws money at it, “you haven’t got the skills base with which to go and do the work that’s required.”

A skills shortage in the defense industry

Paul Oxley, a spokesperson for UK defense trade association ADS Group, told BI that demand for skilled workers now presents the defense industry’s “largest barrier for growth.”

This covers everything from traditional skills like welding and high-end engineering, to growing fields like cybersecurity, digital, and AI capabilities.

Oxley said that surveys of ADS members have seen the issue of talent leapfrog energy prices to become the top worry for many companies.

These concerns come amid an increased commitment by the UK to defense spending — to 2.5% of GDP — that has defense-related industries looking out for new orders.

Big projects are already in the works. Dreadnought-class submarines, the Tempest fighter jet, and Type 26 and 31 frigates are due to come into service in the next decade or so.

Yet in March, Kevin Craven, the head of ADS Group, warned lawmakers that skills shortages are “combining to a point where both the defence and aerospace industry cannot fulfil the demand that they have.”

These warnings also come as the government prepares to publish its latest Defence Industrial Strategy, which a Ministry of Defence spokesperson said will help the UK have the “capability, skills and industrial resilience” for warfighting.

Multiple skills initiatives are already underway, they added.

An ‘arms race’ for skills

The UK’s defense sector pays an average of £39,900, Oxley said, which is about $53,000 and around 14% higher than the national average.

Related stories

Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know

Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know

But even that can’t always compete with other sectors, Bailey, the MP, said.

Meanwhile, many companies, like Amazon, actively recruit UK veterans as part of a government program pledging to support post-service careers. Amazon declined to comment when approached by BI.

Bailey shared that other competing industries include infrastructure projects, such as the recent nationwide rollout of electric smart meters.

He told BI those leaving the RAF for such companies “would find an easier job — because it’s less regulated and controlled and demanding on their skills — paying equal or more than they would expect on the general market.”

In addition, security clearances make it hard to hire from abroad — and in any case, the UK’s nearest European defense industry neighbors are themselves in a scramble for talent.

A shortage decades in the making

The expansion of a talent-hungry tech sector compounds a much longer-running skills issue.

Andrew Kinniburgh, a spokesperson for manufacturing industry trade body Make UK, told the Defence Select Committee in March that the country is in an “arms race” for engineers.

Campaigners say STEM has been neglected from the earliest schooldays up, causing a shortage that has seen all sectors — not just military — competing for talent.

That situation wasn’t helped by the Apprenticeship Levy, a 2016 attempt to invigorate private sector investment in training. It was so cumbersome that schemes fell by 172,000 across all sectors in its first year, according to HR industry body CIPD.

The government now says it’s streamlining the process.

The looming threat of ‘skill fade’

Industry experts told BI that another reason defense sector workforce skills have atrophied is a long-term lack of investment in the military that began in the 1990s.

The defense ministry spokesperson told BI that the current government is addressing the country’s security “after years of hollowing out.”

People like naval architects and high-level engineers take decades to nurture, and when orders dry up, “you have skill fade in these areas quite quickly,” said Sam Cranny-Evans, a freelance defense analyst and associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute.

“Once they’re gone, they’re gone,” he told BI. “Standing them up again is really hard.”

COVID-19 lockdowns haven’t helped. Suddenly, people with 10 to 15 years left in their careers decided to accelerate their retirement plans, leaving what Oxley called a “handover cliff edge” and a decadelong knowledge gap.

The problem has come to a head before.

In the early 2000s, BAE Systems took over a contract to produce the Astute-class submarine, following a 10-year gap since the development of the earlier Vanguard-class sub.

Dated skills — among other factors — became a major problem, forcing the UK to bring in General Dynamics Electric Boat, a US company, to help at an eventual cost of about $145 million.

The project ran years late, exceeded its budget by hundreds of millions of pounds, and spurred multiple reckonings that still reverberate today.

Janet Garner, BAE Systems’ future workforce director for submarines, told BI the company is focused on ensuring it has a strong submarine workforce. She highlighted its $33.5-million training center and said early careers programs are “up to record levels.”

An analysis by Navy Lookout highlighted lessons learned, saying that the next-generation Dreadnought went into production with a much more experienced workforce. But across the industry, there’s a long road ahead.

A ‘puddle’ of talent

Oxley and Bailey say there’s a lot more to be done, and that skills need to be addressed at the level of education. Both are calling for schools and colleges to develop applied STEM curricula showcasing the appeal of working in defense.

Encouraging a much more flexible career structure, allowing people to “zig-zag” between the military and civilian sectors and making the relationship complementary rather than competitive, is also among the suggestions being made.

Tan Dhesi, a lawmaker heading up the UK parliament’s Defence Select Committee, declined to comment in detail while the inquiries continue, but said that he had seen “clear and consistent” evidence that the issue needs addressing.

“We need a sea of talent,” Oxley said. “At the moment, it’s a puddle.”



Read the full article here

defense industry ramping shortage skills
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Why Americans Are Buying Vacation Rentals in Italy

Why Americans Are Buying Vacation Rentals in Italy

Google, XAI, OpenAI Pull Back After Meta’s Scale AI Investment

Google, XAI, OpenAI Pull Back After Meta’s Scale AI Investment

Silicon Valley CEOs and Founders Who Tried Psychedelics

Silicon Valley CEOs and Founders Who Tried Psychedelics

I Vibe Coded a Website With My Daughter Using an AI Tool Called Bolt

I Vibe Coded a Website With My Daughter Using an AI Tool Called Bolt

Netflix Makes Its First Linear TV Deal, Hinting at Bigger Ambitions

Netflix Makes Its First Linear TV Deal, Hinting at Bigger Ambitions

Using Dating Apps While Living Abroad Has Come With Pros and Cons

Using Dating Apps While Living Abroad Has Come With Pros and Cons

Rejected Twice by Microsoft, He Built a Plan and Finally Got the Job

Rejected Twice by Microsoft, He Built a Plan and Finally Got the Job

Apple Snubbed This Big-Name Blogger After He Criticized Its AI Rollout

Apple Snubbed This Big-Name Blogger After He Criticized Its AI Rollout

Israel’s F-15I Ra’am ‘Thunder’ Fighter Jets Used Against Iran: Photos

Israel’s F-15I Ra’am ‘Thunder’ Fighter Jets Used Against Iran: Photos

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Why Americans Are Buying Vacation Rentals in Italy

Why Americans Are Buying Vacation Rentals in Italy

June 19, 2025
Lyft CMO Brian Irving Talks ‘Customer-Obsessed’ Marketing

Lyft CMO Brian Irving Talks ‘Customer-Obsessed’ Marketing

June 19, 2025
Google, XAI, OpenAI Pull Back After Meta’s Scale AI Investment

Google, XAI, OpenAI Pull Back After Meta’s Scale AI Investment

June 19, 2025
Sam Altman Says His Kids Will ‘Never Be Smarter Than AI’

Sam Altman Says His Kids Will ‘Never Be Smarter Than AI’

June 19, 2025
Best Credit Card Combinations To Maximize Rewards

Best Credit Card Combinations To Maximize Rewards

June 19, 2025

Latest News

Silicon Valley CEOs and Founders Who Tried Psychedelics

Silicon Valley CEOs and Founders Who Tried Psychedelics

June 19, 2025
David Sacks Says Chip Export Rules May Weaken US Global Tech Dominance

David Sacks Says Chip Export Rules May Weaken US Global Tech Dominance

June 19, 2025
HELOCs Rise, Home Equity Loans Flat As The Fed Stays Steady

HELOCs Rise, Home Equity Loans Flat As The Fed Stays Steady

June 18, 2025

Subscribe to News

Get the latest finance and business news and updates directly to your inbox.

Advertisement
Demo
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
2025 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.