4m people are still unable to complete a single basic digital task to get online,5m workers will be acutely under skilled in basic digital skills by 2030 and 7m households have no broadband or mobile internet access.

In a scathing report out today,House of Lords Peers say that the Government’s ambition to make the UK a technology superpower and boost economic growth is being undermined by high levels of digital exclusion.

The Committee says the scale of the problem is a “direct consequence of political lethargy”.

Despite aiming to make the UK the centre of AI regulation internationally the Government does not have a credible plan to tackle digital exclusion. The last digital inclusion strategy was published in 2014. The problem is being exacerbated by the cost of living crisis which is forcing more households to cut back or cancel their internet packages.

The findings come in a report published by the Communications and Digital Committee. It finds that by failing to take decisive action to tackle digital exclusion the Government is allowing millions of citizens to fall behind – with multi-billion pound impacts on economic growth, public health and levelling up. Overall digital skills shortages cost the economy up to £63bn a year.

The Committee sounds the alarm about deepening disadvantage as the rapid shift towards online services accelerates and those who remain offline fall ever further behind. Already 90% of jobs are only advertised online. The growing use of machine learning in public and private sector services will further disadvantage digitally excluded groups, who are often poorly represented in datasets and are likely to face further marginalisation as a result.

Digital inclusion is a moving target. The report makes clear that without effective Government action the digital divide will widen. As the pace of technological change accelerates, the gap between included and excluded groups deepens and even those who can get by today may struggle in future. The Government should not assume digital exclusion will be solved as older generations leave the workforce or die.

Peers recommended urgent action to help with the cost of living crisis:

This should include scrapping VAT on social internet tariffs to reduce the cost, and working with the private sector to scale up internet voucher schemes.

The Government should make public sector organisations donate old devices to digital inclusion projects, and encourage the private sector to do the same.

Peers say that the most basic digital skills are now as important as maths and literacy. They should feature more prominently in schools, apprenticeships and adult learning courses. The focus should be on basic skills, not coding.

The Government should also support libraries and other community venues to take a bigger role in supporting digital inclusion and must review the increasing use of predictive machine-learning tools in public services to ensure the digitally excluded do not face further marginalisation due to poor representation in the datasets used to inform algorithmic decision making.

Commenting on the report Baroness Stowell of Beeston, Chair of the Committee said:

“The Government has bold ambitions to make the UK a technology superpower and centre of AI development, but we can’t deliver an exciting digital future when five million workers are under skilled in digital and nearly two and half million people still can’t complete a single basic digital task. Tackling digital exclusion isn’t as sexy as searching for the next tech unicorn, but we can’t compete as a global player without getting the basics right.

“We have found a distinct lack of leadership in Government to tackle this issue. It is shocking that a digital inclusion strategy has not been produced since 2014 and the Government sees no need for a new one. It is vital we get a grip of this now.

“The cost of living crisis has made access to the internet unaffordable for many. We need urgent action to ensure people aren’t priced offline. This should include scrapping VAT on social tariffs and more efforts to promote their availability. The Government should also work with the private sector to expand internet voucher schemes and set an example by making more public sector bodies donate old IT equipment to digital inclusion projects.

“Digital exclusion is a moving target. As technology develops, people currently confident using IT at work and home will need to keep refreshing their skills to avoid being left behind. We can’t assume younger people are digital natives who won’t need to develop new skills. We need to ensure everyone and all age groups have the digital skills they need to operate and the opportunities to keep developing those skills as technologies change.”

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