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Does the UK really need more engineers?

Some think claims of a serious lack of STEM graduates are exaggerated

Published on
March 6, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Source: Getty

Similar levels of unemployment among non-STEM graduates suggest that a STEM degree, in itself, does not necessarily provide an advantage

The UK economy, which seems at last to be finding its feet and starting to grow, might any day be brought to its knees by a shortage of science and engineering graduates. That dire warning has been sounded repeatedly over the past few years, and anyone who follows the news would think that calamity is just around the corner.

Bleak headlines have been generated by report after report issued by major bodies such as the Social Market Foundation, the CBI and the Royal Academy of Engineering. The last of these, published in 2012, suggested that as many as 100,000 more graduates in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) subjects would be needed by 2020 as the service sector wanes while innovation and high-tech manufacturing drive growth.

It is certainly a compelling narrative, but not everyone is convinced by it. One sceptic is聽Robert Dingwall, part-time adviser to the School of Social Sciences at Nottingham Trent University.

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鈥淭here are some local shortages, and there are some unrealistic expectations from employers; but generally speaking, there is no聽particular reason to think that the country is experiencing a [STEM] skills shortage,鈥 he聽says.

鈥淐learly employers have to put some work into finding the right graduates. There is an expectation that universities will do all the work for them.鈥

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Nigel Steele, honorary secretary of the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications, dismisses naysayers such as Dingwall as 鈥渉aving an axe to grind鈥 and claims that their position 鈥渇lies in the face of all the evidence鈥. But what is the evidence? Steele argues that the relatively high starting salaries enjoyed by STEM graduates indicate that they are in demand from employers. But Dingwall counters that the differential is not great enough to suggest a genuine mismatch of supply to demand 鈥 which is why the financial industry is still able to poach some of the best STEM graduates.

For its part, the government clearly accepts the shortage argument. Initiatives to boost the uptake of science and engineering subjects at the secondary and tertiary level are numerous and varied. In universities, some STEM disciplines are deemed by the Higher Education Funding Council for England to be 鈥渟trategically important and vulnerable鈥 subjects (鈥淪ivs鈥). This denomination, introduced in 2005 and revamped in 2012 in light of the coalition鈥檚 higher education reforms, is intended to ensure the continued availability of places in subjects such as chemistry, physics and chemical engineering in the event of 鈥渕arket failure鈥. Not all Sivs are STEM subjects, but most are, and Hefce has so far spent 拢350 million supporting them.

Emma Smith, professor of education at the University of Leicester, cautions that if no STEM shortage exists, such initiatives 鈥渞isk being counterproductive, merely increasing the number of unemployed or underemployed graduates鈥. She investigated the issue with Stephen Gorard, professor of education and well-being at Durham University鈥檚 School of Education. For a paper they published in the British Journal of Educational Studies in 2011, they scrutinised data on university applications and admissions and graduate destinations, and concluded that there is 鈥渋nsufficient evidence鈥 of a genuine shortage.

Smith says that the arguments for a shortage 鈥渢end to be driven by the [STEM] sector鈥. Noting that other sectors often make similar cases, she points out that worries about a declining flow of graduates into the teaching profession just under a decade ago were found to be unwarranted.

Her findings suggest that relatively large proportions of STEM graduates are either unemployed six months after graduation or working in relatively low-skilled jobs. 鈥淪imilar levels of unemployment among non-STEM graduates suggest that a STEM degree, in itself, does not necessarily provide an employment advantage, at least in terms of the early career destinations for which we have data,鈥 she says. This raises the question of whether STEM degrees adequately prepare students for careers outside the core fields, she聽adds.

Nevertheless, she warns that debates about shortages are complex and difficult to untangle. That conclusion was echoed by a 2012 House of Lords inquiry into STEM subjects in higher education. It found that the lack of data on the supply and demand for STEM graduates made it 鈥渧ery difficult鈥 to assess whether a deficit truly聽exists.

In November 2013, the UK Commission for Employment and Skills analysed the supply of and demand for STEM graduates using information from the Office for National Statistics鈥 Labour Force Survey. The authors, led by Derek Bosworth, associate fellow at the University of Warwick鈥檚 Institute for Employment Research, found that, overall, the core STEM sectors (excluding medicine, dentistry and related subjects) employed about 45聽per cent of graduates with degrees in those fields in 2011.

But data on core STEM graduates who left university in the same year suggest a shift: only one-third worked in a core STEM job or a core STEM sector or both, compared with 45聽per cent of 2001 graduates. The report suggests that this drop might be at least partly the result of a change in occupation and sector classifications, but says it could also reflect the rise of less demanding study programmes and the emergence of new subjects, such as sports science, that may not provide graduates with the skills employers want. It might also reflect a trend of STEM workers 鈥渟preading out throughout the overall workforce鈥, a tendency exacerbated by the recession driving graduates to take whatever jobs they can find.

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Even if there had not been a recession, predictions about the supply and demand of聽STEM graduates for 2020 outlined in the report do not suggest that there would have been a shortage in most regions of the UK. Based on 2007 (pre-recession) figures, only Scotland and the South East of England would have suffered one.

Two female scientists in laboratory

Meanwhile, interviews conducted with employers as part of the analysis point to shortages of electronic and electrical engineers. They also reveal that recruitment for certain STEM positions relies on a small pool of universities. Some universities have cut back on equipment and laboratories, with the result that today鈥檚 graduates may have less hands-on experience than previous cohorts.

David Lynch, global head of engineering at the pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline, says that last year he was unable to fill two graduate electrical engineering positions; in the previous year, he had to recruit for these jobs from overseas. He adds that the engineers required to help automate manufacturing processes are also in relatively short supply.

鈥淔or us it varies by discipline,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut certainly across the STEM subjects there are areas of shortage. It is a bit of a mix between [a lack of] calibre and availability.鈥

Other major STEM employers contacted by 探花视频 paint a mixed picture. Procter & Gamble, which recruits on a rolling basis throughout the year, says that it filled the 鈥渧ast majority鈥 of graduate jobs during 2013. But it pinpoints deficits in mechanical engineering talent. Unilever, which filled all STEM jobs during its graduate recruitment round last year, says that it had about 130 applicants for every graduate STEM post. At BP, meanwhile, a聽whopping 11,000 graduates applied for places on its early development programme, which offered 138 graduate STEM positions and 92 STEM internships, all of which were filled.

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Suzy Style, BP鈥檚 head of UK graduate recruitment, says: 鈥淚ncreasingly we are seeing that there are STEM graduates out there, but there are lots of other companies fishing in the same pool, trying to get the best and brightest of that group.鈥 She adds that BP has challenges finding automotive engineers and geophysicists.

Overall data on the number of graduate jobs available in STEM areas are difficult to come by. Research conducted last year by the employment consultancy Work Communications totted up the places on all graduate schemes offered by UK employers in all sectors and found 65,000 places for the academic year 2012-13. To put that in context, 132,790 UK-domiciled students graduated with a first degree in STEM subjects in 2011-12 (the most recent year for which data are available), according to the Higher Education Statistics Agency.

Marcus Body, head of research at Work Communications, says: 鈥淎s soon as you look at the numbers, it is very hard to justify [claims of] a skills shortage.鈥 Echoing Dingwall鈥檚 point, he says that for all the talk from industry about needing and valuing STEM skills, businesses are not competing for STEM graduates on salary. Currently, he says, the top-paying graduate job is at Aldi supermarkets, which provides an annual salary of 拢40,000 and a fully expensed Audi A4. 鈥淣o engineering company offers this,鈥 he notes.

But the Institute of Physics鈥 director of education and science, Peter Main, argues that there is indeed a wage premium for STEM graduates but that it can be hard to spot. The institute learned from tracking physics graduates for five years between 2006 and 2010 that although the median starting salary for graduates after one year was only about 拢22,500, a聽year later 40聽per cent of graduates were earning more than 拢25,000, he says. Main notes that almost no data on graduate destinations go beyond three years, and he says this is when the real physics graduate premium 鈥渒icks in鈥.

The institute鈥檚 study also found that more than half of all physics graduates remain in higher education one year after completing their undergraduate course. 鈥淭hat means that the better graduates are going off to do PhDs, so you are not really comparing like with like when you compare graduates within the first three years of employment,鈥 Main says.

For engineering graduates, the situation is even more complex. Anecdotal reports from graduates seeking employment suggest that there are two distinct groups encountering different situations. Peter Finegold, head of education at the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, says that graduates with a first or an upper second-class degree are in high demand, but it is less clear what happens to those who graduate with lower marks.

鈥淣o one can offer a definitive explanation of what is going on,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e have a two-stage labour market at the moment, with [both] high skill demands and high unemployment.鈥 This unusual situation suggests that 鈥渟omething strange is happening鈥, he adds. Recent discussion within the sector suggests that industry is committed to looking more broadly at the graduate crop in the future rather than 鈥渟imply creaming off the best graduates鈥, he continues.

Year after year, employers take issue with the quality of graduates and question their readiness for work. Michael Reiss, professor of science education at the Institute of Education, University of London, notes that universities that recruit STEM graduates for doctorates also increasingly complain of a聽lack of 鈥渢op-quality鈥 UK graduates, which he attributes to 鈥渘ot enough graduates coming out of really strong STEM departments鈥.

But, according to Body, there is little evidence to substantiate claims that the quality of STEM graduates is declining. In his view, it聽is more likely that employers now expect graduates to have more skills than ever before. He adds that any perceived problems are magnified by the fact that STEM employers have a smaller pool to recruit from than other graduate recruiters such as accountancy firms, which can select from among the entire 340,000 home students who graduate from UK universities annually.

One measure that might resolve some of these issues was suggested in the House of Lords report. It called for a body to be established to gather real-time data on the supply and demand of STEM graduates and to report its findings annually to Hefce and the government. But there is no sign of that happening. Until it does, the prophets of doom are likely to continue gratifying the newspapers鈥 unquenchable thirst for disaster scenarios.

STEM sells: growth of study at first degree level outpaces others

Growth of study at first degree level

The growth in the number of graduates from all STEM first degree programmes has outpaced the growth of graduates in all subjects, suggests a聽探花视频 analysis of data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency.

Including figures on the number of graduates from medicine, dentistry and veterinary science courses (omitted from the traditional definition of STEM), the number of STEM graduates increased by 81聽per cent between 1994-95 and 2011-12, compared with a 64聽per cent rise in the number of all graduates over the same period.

Using the traditional definition of STEM, and when the data are broken down by subject, however, there are striking differences in growth (see graph).

The number of engineering and technology graduates, for example, rose just 7聽per cent between 1994-95 and 2011-12, whereas the number of graduates of subjects allied to medicine more than doubled.

While the graphic above does not separate home and international students, comparisons can be made of the number of STEM graduates as a proportion of all graduates.

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For home students, growth in UK-domiciled STEM first degree awards as a proportion of all first degrees rose by 5 percentage points between 1994-95 and 2008-09, from 36 to 41 per cent.

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