In this new report, the Youth Employment Group (YEG), where Learning and Work Institute is a Co-Chair, propose a new Young Person’s Guarantee. If adopted by policymakers in England, young people under the age of 25 will receive support to access employment, training or education within four months of leaving employment or formal education. This would provide extra support if they have not found other employment or education opportunities before this.

More than 790,000 young people are currently NEET, a 23% rise over the last two years. This equates to 12.5% of all British young people across the UK, a figure that rises to 13.8% when looking at England alone. According to new YEG calculations, reducing the number of young people not in education, employment or training (NEET) to the same levels as the Netherlands (4.4%) could generate £69 billion in GDP.

There is strong evidence that being NEET has a scarring effect on young people’s outcomes. Spending time unemployed under the age of 23 has been linked to lower wages even twenty years on and those who are NEET between the ages of 18 to 19 are 20% more likely to be unemployed even ten years later. Troublingly, young people from disadvantaged backgrounds are significantly more likely than their better-off peers to be NEET. This means the negative effects of time spent neither learning nor earning are disproportionately borne by this group, with clear consequences for social mobility.

Underpinning its Young Person’s Guarantee, the Youth Employment Group calls on the government to implement five policies:

  1. Proactively support young people in education who are at high risk of NEET.
  2. Re-commit to Youth Hubs and extend their services to all economically inactive young people.
  3. Establish a new joint ministerial brief between the Department for Work and Pensions and the Department for Education.
  4. Pilot a targeted placement scheme for young people who are long-term NEET.
  5. Strengthen and broaden the range of Level 2 and Level 3 pathways available to young people.

1 Mai 2026

Driving Change in Higher Education

Learning and Work Institute is working in partnership with The Carers Federation with funding from The National Lottery Community Fund to improve the support that young adult carers receive in higher education.

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21 Ebrill 2026

Labour Market Briefing: April 2026

Our analysis of the ONS labour market statistics, released on the morning of 21 April 2026.

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21 Ebrill 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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21 Ebrill 2026

Labour market stats response, April 2026

L&W’s chief economist Dr Helen Gray responds to the latest labour market data from ONS.

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19 Mawrth 2026

Labour Market Briefing: March 2026

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

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19 Mawrth 2026

Labour market stats response, March 2026

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

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17 Mawrth 2026

There’s one million NEETs in the UK. Are we doing enough?

Stephen Evans, Chief Executive at Learning and Work Institute, reflects on the Government’s expansion of the Youth Guarantee and if support is going far enough to help young people into work or training.

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17 Mawrth 2026

Beyond the headline: What emerging qualitative insights tell us about supporting young people into work

Iona McArdle, L&W’s JobsPlus Programme Manager, shares some emerging insights from the JobsPlus evaluation on young people’s experiences of being not in education, employment or training (NEET).

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16 Mawrth 2026

Responding to the Government’s announcement on expanding opportunities for young people

L&W Chief Executive Stephen Evans responds to the Government’s announcement on expanding opportunities for young people on 16 March 2026.

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