- New report shows that medium and large Australian businesses are expecting to spend approximately $8 billion on learning and development in 2024, up 15% year-on-year.
- However nearly half of surveyed employers admit they aren’t prioritising training budgets to reflect gaps, with four of five of the top skills gaps in digital.
- One in eight Aussie businesses are planning on spending approximately 50% less on learning and development this year, which will mean missing out on skills valued at approximately $2 billion, equivalent to $5.6 million per day.
- Australia’s participation in learning and development at-risk of lagging behind its international peers
MELBOURNE, 12 March 2023 — New research released today by RMIT Online in partnership with Deloitte Access Economics, reveals that medium and large Australian businesses are expecting to spend approximately $8 billion on learning and development in 2024, up 15% year-on-year.
However, nearly half of businesses surveyed (45%) admit they aren't prioritising training budgets to address skills gaps, with four of the top five skills the employers surveyed said they lacked were in the digital space - including Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI), data science, coding and cyber security.
The ‘Ready, Set, Upskill’ report highlights that while spending is increasing overall, one in eight surveyed Australian businesses are planning on almost halving their crucial learning and development budgets this year, leaving them at risk of a serious skills gap. Further, businesses who are predicting poorer prospects for their business are twice as likely to be cutting spending in learning and development, compared to those who are predicting a more positive outlook.
Along with a possible impact on staff retention, revenue and customer engagement, the report estimates that the fall in learning and development investment for businesses cutting spending will mean missing out on skills valued at approximately $2 billion in 2024, equivalent to $5.6 million per day.
Against a backdrop of declining productivity growth in Australia, two thirds (62%) of the businesses surveyed for the report identified the broader link between the benefits of addressing the skills gap and productivity growth for the country's economic recovery. Nearly two-thirds of surveyed employers (64%) believe businesses are not doing enough to address skills gaps.
Among medium and large businesses that are planning to reduce their expenditure on learning and development in 2024, for every $1 that is cut from learning and development budgets, businesses lose skills which are valued at $3.40 on average.
A lack of investment in learning and development also means that Australian businesses are at risk of falling behind their international peers. Almost half of adults in the EU have participated in some form of non-formal learning, whereas Australia lags behind with just 32%, coming 24th out of 32 surveyed EU countries. Australia’s participation in non-formal learning has been on a downward trend since 2013, putting it in stark contrast to the EU which has seen an increase.