Gettingonabit, there is the problem of wages for one man bands , plus extra health and safety training and as I said in my previous post, the apprentice more often than not starts his own one man band when qualified . Less so with bricklayers etc because they need so much equipment plus transport to take equipment from one job to another, easier to take a hold-all than a cement mixer .
The building trade is hard , working on a barn roof in winter months is not enjoyable , neither is digging frozen ground ,
My brother was just about to start university when he changed his mind and chose a bricklaying apprenticeship, he did this with the intention of having his own firm, he qualified , then he started on his own , our father went with him as a labourer - no pay- he then took one one apprentice and the firm grew. He is now in his fifties , is waiting for a second knee replacement op and his bones are rather a mess, yes he is quite wealthy but at the cost of his health . So easy for anyone to say - why not serve an apprenticeship in the building trade , I am thankful my grandson went to university and will not have the same health problems as his father who is a carpenter - my brothers foreman . Yes we need builders but it takes it's toll on the body