Times business editor @fletcherr has spoken to the heads of Unilever, Salesforce and the CBI, as well as the government's Minister of Apprenticeships and Skills, about the future of work and higher education
Why is the UK experiencing a skills gap?
The speakers agreed that while Covid had exacerbated the issue, the transformation of the labour market in general over the last decade is rendering many peoples' skills redundant #TimesCEOSummit
.@Unilever's solution to this has been to 're-skill' its staff as roles within the company change
“It’s much more attractive to retrain and re-skill than it is to pay redundancy…we’re committed to reskilling all of our employees by 2025” says Alan Jope, the company's CEO
Is higher education failing to train people for work then?
Tony Danker, the Director General of the CBI, has pushed back against Kate Bingham's earlier comments about the need for a greater focus on STEM subjects
Gillian Keegan, the government's minister for apprenticeships and skills, herself argues that the issue is a broader disconnect between education and business - one that can be solved with greater employer involvement in education #TimesCEOSummit
The panel also noted that covid has forced many employees to reconsider their options, as well as what value work brings to their lives
The CBI believes now that values, not perks or gimmicks, are what make staff want to stay with their employers #TimesCEOSummit
Gillian Keegan says that the government believes in a "need to create a culture of lifelong learning. That means adults coming back into education and re-skilling”
She's confident that the government can achieve this cultural change in the near future #TimesCEOSummit
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Boris Johnson stood by Matt Hancock last night amid mounting political and public pressure for him to resign after breaching social distancing rules during an affair with a senior aide thetimes.co.uk/article/matt-h…
But one government source said yesterday that the health secretary should do “the decent thing” and resign, describing Johnson’s decision to stand by him as a “failure of leadership”
Scientific advisers warned that Hancock’s breach of social distancing rules could encourage others to do the same
Senior health officials are also said to be “pissed off” by the revelations, with one questioning “how is anyone supposed to look him in the eye?”
Stonewall has been accused of using its workplace equality scheme to “coerce” publicly-funded organisations and companies to lobby for changes to the law thetimes.co.uk/article/stonew…
Documents show the charity also instructed NHS trusts and local councils on what to say on their social media accounts and recommended public support for its position on gender identity in return for points on its 'Top 100 Employers’ index
In one instance, it told an NHS Trust, the Scottish Government and a local council to ditch the word “mother” from maternity policies to get a higher place in its ranking thetimes.co.uk/article/stonew…
Eton College has signed an unprecedented agreement with an academy trust to open three highly selective state sixth-forms in deprived northern areas, The Times can reveal thetimes.co.uk/article/eton-t…
The sixth forms, opening under the free schools programme, will aim to fast-track teenagers from poor homes to top universities such as Oxford and Cambridge.
It is the first time a prestigious private school has forged such a partnership with an academy trust.
#WorldatFive 🌍: “A long history of winding up the Russians goes some way to explaining Moscow’s furious reaction this week to a British ship’s incursion into its claimed waters”, says @CharlesBremnerthetimes.co.uk/article/britai…
In 1791, when Russia annexed Crimea and Britain sent warships into the Black Sea, a London newspaper celebrated the episode with a cartoon of plucky Britons whipping the Russian leader, drawn in the shape of a bear.
The king was George III and the bear was Empress Catherine the Great but the message was the same as this week’s patriotic twinge over HMS Defender’s dash through Russia’s claimed waters.
He ran the American Institute for Safe Sex Practices: any member who paid him a fee and tested HIV-negative could have Aids-free sex with other members for six months.
McAfee purchased a 400-acre plot in Colorado and turned it into a yoga retreat. Pagans were employed to beat drums and employees allegedly competed to have sex in his office, while he wrote yoga manuals and dated teenage girls.