Workforce Development Grants in Australia: Funding Skills, Training, and Employment

Australia's workforce faces significant transformation — technological disruption, skills shortages in key sectors, changing work patterns, and populations facing persistent employment disadvantage. Government and philanthropic investment in workforce development addresses skills gaps, supports disadvantaged workers, and builds the human capital Australia needs for future prosperity.

The workforce development landscape in Australia

Key challenges

  • Skills shortages across healthcare, construction, clean energy, and technology sectors
  • Persistent unemployment and underemployment in disadvantaged communities
  • Automation and AI displacing routine jobs
  • Workforce aging (shortages emerging in many sectors as baby boomers retire)
  • Mismatch between education and employment — training systems not aligned with employer needs
  • Barriers to employment for specific populations (people with disability, ex-offenders, long-term unemployed, older workers)

Federal government workforce development

Jobs and Skills Australia

Jobs and Skills Australia is the national body providing evidence and advice on workforce and skills needs — informing the allocation of government training investment.

Australian Skills Quality Authority (ASQA)

ASQA regulates vocational education and training (VET) providers — ensuring quality of training funded through government programmes.

Fee-Free TAFE

Federal government investment in fee-free TAFE places in priority areas:
- Healthcare and social assistance
- Early childhood education and care
- Technology
- Clean energy
- Agriculture

This isn't a grant but subsidised training — significant for organisations developing their workforce.

Workforce Australia

The employment services system — connecting job seekers with employment and training support:
- Career Transition Assistance
- Skills and Training Incentive
- Workforce Australia Connect (for mature age workers)

Australian Apprenticeships

Support for apprenticeships and traineeships:
- Incentive payments to employers taking on apprentices
- Support for apprentices from disadvantaged backgrounds
- Completion bonuses

Employer Incentives

Government incentives for employers hiring disadvantaged workers:
- Wage subsidies for hiring long-term unemployed, mature age, people with disability
- Indigenous employment incentives
- Youth employment incentives

State government workforce programmes

Each state funds additional workforce development:

TAFE network

State-funded TAFE institutes provide the bulk of vocational education — states fund places, infrastructure, and priority training programmes.

Skills and Jobs Centres (Victoria)

Service centres providing free employment and training advice.

Jobs Queensland

Queensland's industry workforce planning body — funding and coordinating workforce development.

NSW Jobs Plus Programme

Investment attraction with workforce development components.

Employment for disadvantaged groups

Disability Employment Services (DES)

The federal DES programme funds employment support for Australians with disability:
- Job placement services
- Workplace modifications
- Ongoing support in employment

Transition to Work

Employment services for young people (15-24) not in employment, education, or training — intensive support through specialist providers.

Social Enterprises and Supported Employment

Australian Disability Enterprises (ADEs) provide supported employment for people with significant disability — government-funded to support commercial operations that employ disabled workers.

Refugee and Migrant Employment

Settlement services include employment support — connecting recently arrived migrants and refugees with employment and training pathways.

Ex-offender employment

Limited but growing investment in employment pathways for people leaving prison — reducing recidivism through economic inclusion.

Industry-based training funds

Many industries have industry training funds — often through levies — investing in workforce development:
- Construction (Civil Contractors Federation training funds)
- Mining (METS sector training)
- Healthcare (Health Workforce Fund)
- Agriculture (RDC-funded agricultural workforce)

These funds typically support training, apprenticeship, and workforce capacity building within the industry.

Philanthropic investment in workforce development

Foundation for Young Australians (FYA)

FYA invests in young people's employment readiness — future of work research, employability skills, entrepreneurship.

Paul Ramsay Foundation

Social mobility focus including employment pathways for disadvantaged young people.

Brotherhood of St Laurence

Research and direct programmes addressing workforce disadvantage — particularly for unemployed youth and older workers.

Business councils and chambers

Business Councils at federal and state level invest in workforce development advocacy and some training programmes.

Grant applications for workforce development

Alignment with skills priorities

Government workforce grants prioritise skills in shortage areas. Align applications with current national and state skills priority lists — healthcare, construction, clean energy, technology, and agriculture have been consistent priorities.

Employer partnership

Strong workforce development grant applications show employer partnership — real jobs at the end of training pathways, not training for training's sake. Industry co-investment signals employer commitment.

Target populations

Many workforce grants are targeted — demonstrate that your programme serves the specific population the grant is designed to reach (young people, people with disability, long-term unemployed, etc.).

Completion and placement rates

Training that doesn't result in employment has limited value. Show your track record on training completion and employment placement rates.

Stackable credentials

Programmes that build toward recognised qualifications (Cert III, Cert IV) are more fundable than standalone skills programmes with no formal recognition.

Industry recognition

Training endorsed by industry bodies (industry training packages, employer groups) is more credible than funder-designed programmes without industry input.


Tahua's grants management platform supports organisations managing workforce development grant portfolios — with training programme tracking, participant outcome management, employment placement reporting, and the multi-funder tools that help workforce organisations demonstrate impact to government and philanthropic funders.

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