Unemployment spiked sharply as a result of the coronavirus crisis and associated social distancing restrictions. During March and April 2020 around 2.5 million individuals made claims for Universal Credit, with claims running at seven times usual levels at the peak. The number of vacancies in the economy has fallen by three fifths, and it is likely that five years of employment growth has been wiped out in one month. The impacts have been uneven, with young people, women and the lower paid hardest hit.

The Government’s response, including the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme, has helped to prevent this from being even worse.

This discussion paper sets out suggested key priorities, evidence and proposals for how government might design and deliver its employment and skills response to this downturn. It has been prepared with input from a range of contributors with expertise in these areas, and argues for five priorities:

  1. Targeted tapering of emergency support. Ensuring that the withdrawal of the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme between August and October minimises the risks of a damaging second spike of unemployment, and ensure support for workers that lose their jobs to quickly re-enter work.
  2. Rapid back to work support for those newly unemployed. To get people back to work quickly, we need to mobilise Jobcentre Plus work coaches, the recruitment industry and local and voluntary sector employment services to provide rapid support to the newly unemployed – delivered online initially, and working in partnership to deliver a coherent offer locally.
  3. Targeted support for the long-term unemployed. Based on the evidence of what has worked in the past, we need employment services that provide personalised support alongside access to training, volunteering and other specialist provision; working in partnership locally to align with and scale existing provision where possible.
  4. Education and employment promise for young people. We need to make sure everyone leaving education is guaranteed support to find work or a place in education or training, with a Jobs Guarantee for those out-of-work for a longer period of time.
  5. Building for the future. We should plan now to build more joined-up employment and skills support, and how to increase access to well paid, high quality work based on understanding the future of the labour market.

18 Mehefin 2026

Labour Market Briefing: June 2026

Our analysis of the ONS labour market statistics, released on the morning of 18 June 2026.

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18 Mehefin 2026

Labour market stats response, June 2026

L&W’s chief executive Stephen Evans responds to the latest labour market data from ONS.

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17 Mehefin 2026

Evaluation of Central London Forward’s Youth Guarantee Trailblazer 

Learning and Work Institute has evaluated the first year of delivery of Full Potential, the Youth Guarantee Trailblazer delivered by Central London Forward.

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9 Mehefin 2026

Innovative, “hyper-local” approach to employment support completes two years

An innovative employment support pilot spanning Medway to Merseyside has shown promise reaching social housing residents who are out of work but do not typically access mainstream support.

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9 Mehefin 2026

Final report: Evaluation of the JobsPlus Pilot

This evaluation of JobsPlus builds on the interim findings published in September 2025 to provide evidence on whether the model can be adapted to the UK context and effectively implemented to improve employment outcomes.  

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28 Mai 2026

Responding to the interim report of the Milburn review

L&W chief executive Stephen Evans responds to the interim report from the Milburn review on Thursday 28 May 2026.

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19 Mai 2026

Labour Market Briefing: May 2026

Our analysis of the ONS labour market statistics, released on the morning of 19 May 2026.

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19 Mai 2026

Labour market dashboard

Every month, Learning and Work Institute produces detailed and timely analysis of the latest labour market statistics from ONS. Explore our interactive charts.

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19 Mai 2026

Labour market stats response, May 2026

L&W’s chief executive Stephen Evans responds to the latest labour market data from ONS.

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