chris9
Automotive
- Feb 18, 2004
- 142
A leading UK politician recently stated in a national newspaper that industry and academia needed to encourage more women into the engineering profession to address the skills shortage.
If indeed there were a skills shortage for engineering posts in the UK then encouraging women into the profession would address the issue. However, about 15 years ago stood many impressive buildings around the UK teaming with engineers. Now they have been demolished and replaced with retail outlets. The ones that are still standing are selling off land and down sizing.
The engineering industry in the UK is shrinking, engineering companies that have been trading for over a hundred years are closing down. British engineering companies are being sold to large multinational companies who often only wish to get their hands on the brand name before discarding the manufacturing base.
Markets are driven by supply and demand. Demand for engineers is so low that pay is very poor in comparison to most other professions.
Just where do politicians get the idea from that there is a shortage of engineers?
If indeed there were a skills shortage for engineering posts in the UK then encouraging women into the profession would address the issue. However, about 15 years ago stood many impressive buildings around the UK teaming with engineers. Now they have been demolished and replaced with retail outlets. The ones that are still standing are selling off land and down sizing.
The engineering industry in the UK is shrinking, engineering companies that have been trading for over a hundred years are closing down. British engineering companies are being sold to large multinational companies who often only wish to get their hands on the brand name before discarding the manufacturing base.
Markets are driven by supply and demand. Demand for engineers is so low that pay is very poor in comparison to most other professions.
Just where do politicians get the idea from that there is a shortage of engineers?