Home Breadcrumb caret Economy Breadcrumb caret Economic Indicators Smallest businesses invest more in training Canada’s smallest businesses lead the way in employee training, investing nearly $2,000 per employee on average each year, says a Canadian Federation of Independent Business’ (CFIB) report. By Staff | August 12, 2015 | Last updated on August 12, 2015 1 min read Canada’s smallest businesses lead the way in employee training, investing $1,907 per employee on average each year, says a Canadian Federation of Independent Business’ (CFIB) report. These findings challenge the view that small and medium enterprises (SMEs) — those with between 2 and 499 employees — are slower to invest in training than their larger counterparts, which spend $1,713 per worker. Read: Some companies may be exempt from new Ontario pension rules SMEs put $9 billion a year into informal on-the-job training. In total, small and medium businesses spend $14 billion a year on training. Informal training is offered by 90%, and is done without any government credits or grants. Inexperienced workers make up 18% of new hires in SMEs, versus 9% at larger companies. SMEs invest an average of $4,243 training each new, inexperienced employee. Read: SEC rule forces public companies to reveal CEO vs. worker pay Although 85% of SMEs say it’s their responsibility to train new workers, 60% fear employees will receive training and leave. CFIB is calling on governments to offer a new training tax credit recognizing informal training. Read: Top Nova Scotia regulator to head OBSI Staff The staff of Advisor.ca have been covering news for financial advisors since 1998. Save Stroke 1 Print Group 8 Share LI logo