Mark Reynolds calls for long-term visas for foreign workers instead as Boris Johnson launches drive to end reliance on immigration

Increasing the wages of construction workers will not solve the industry鈥檚 labour shortage crisis, the chief executive of Mace has said.

Mark Reynolds said the construction sector already 鈥減ays pretty well compared to most鈥 and denied that the industry is reliant on cheap foreign labour.

Speaking to the BBC yesterday, he added that boosting salaries for UK workers would not attract the 80,000 extra staff needed each year to fulfil the government鈥檚 building ambitions.

mark reynolds

Mark Reynolds said the construction sector already 鈥榩ays pretty well compared to most鈥

The comments come ahead of Boris Johnson鈥檚 Conservative party conference speech later today, in which is expected to make increasing wages for UK workers a key policy direction.

The prime minister has said the country is 鈥渕oving to a new approach鈥 with firms paying more for UK workers rather than relying on low paid immigration.

But the government has also offered temporary visas for HGV drivers to combat shortages afflicting a wide range of sectors.

Only 127 drivers had applied to the scheme, Johnson has admitted, with the Road Haulage Association complaining the timeframe being offered, which is less than six months, 鈥渟imply wasn鈥檛 attractive enough鈥 for European drivers to move to the UK and bear costs including short-term rent.

Steve Granite, chief executive of haulier Abbey Logistics Group, said: 鈥淵ou have to put yourselves in the shoes of those people and think, would I up sticks from another country to come and work in the UK for six months and then get told to go back home?

鈥淚t鈥檚 not practical, it鈥檚 not going to work.鈥

Reynolds added that construction needed a 鈥渄emand-led鈥 system of long-term visas rather than short-term ones if it wanted to fill gaps in labour supply.

But Arcadis head of strategic research and insight Simon Rawlinson said it was 鈥渦nrealistic鈥 to think that current employment models could be sustained with or without access to overseas labour.

He said: 鈥淐onstruction offers well-paid jobs that, due to net zero carbon priorities, will be needed in the long-term.

鈥淭he easy availability of skilled self-employed overseas workers has reduced the need for UK employers to structure jobs and careers that are competitively attractive in the UK labour market.鈥

He added that post-covid trends suggested that people have become motivated by factors other than pay, such as work-life balance, placing traditionally demanding industries like construction at a disadvantage.

鈥淲ith a looming low-carbon retrofit boom, there is no doubt that construction needs to attract more skills, which may in turn require a change in business models as well as an increase in pay.鈥

Payroll data from Hudson Contract last month showed that the cost of hiring skilled construction labour climbed by nearly 3% in August.

Average weekly earnings for self-employed people 鈥 around 40% of the sector鈥檚 workforce 鈥 increased by 2.8% in the month to 拢929 per week.

The steepest month-on-month change was seen in the North-east, where average monthly earnings rose by 7.3% with a year-on-year increase of 5.2%.

Earnings across all regions of England and Wales increased for the second consecutive month, with earnings up by nearly 6% on last year, according to the figures.

And in the East Midlands, demand for new regeneration, housing and infrastructure projects drove labour costs to an all-time high of 拢1,022 per week with a year-on-year increase of more than 20%.