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A million young people aren’t in a job or training. Britain has a problem | Richard Partington

about 14 hours ago
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Almost a million young people are not in education, employment or training,Employers are freezing their hiring plans,Unemployment is at a four-year high,Not all is right in the UK jobs market, and the outlook is getting worse,Typically it takes a full-blown recession to spark the type of growth in unemployment that Britain is witnessing today.

About 100,000 jobs have been lost from company payrolls in the past year, and the official jobless rate has hit 4.8%, up from 4.1% a year earlier.More than 9 million working-age adults are neither in employment nor looking for a job.But while this alone ought to be worrying enough, underneath these headline statistics are two troubling trends: a dramatic increase in youth unemployment and rising levels of ill health.

This week the government will respond.Sir Charlie Mayfield, a former chair of John Lewis , is expected to publish his Keep Britain Working review, outlining his recommendations for the government and business to do more to tackle rising levels of worklessness.Commissioned by ministers last year, Mayfield believes businesses must do significantly more to help people with work-limiting health conditions and those with disabilities.Support for mental health in particular is key.“This issue is a nasty one,” Mayfield told me recently at Labour’s party conference in Liverpool.

“There is a tremendous opportunity to do better.“It is absolutely huge in the context of what it means for those people individually, in terms of what it means for the productive capacity that is not then available to the economy, and therefore the implications that has for growth.”As many as one in five working-age adults across the country are either not in employment or currently seeking a job, a position statisticians describe as “economically inactive”.For almost 3 million, the main reason is long-term ill-health, which is near to its highest level on record.Most of the increase has been down to the health of young people.

Between 2015 and 2024, the number of people with work-limiting conditions rose by 900,000, or 32%, for 50- to 64-year-olds.For those aged 16 to 34, the rise was 1.2 million, or 77%.More than a quarter of 16- 24-year-olds who are not in education, employment or training (Neet) are inactive because of disability and ill-health, according to the Resolution Foundation.That figure has more than doubled since 2005.

Separate analysis published this week by the TUC shows that unemployment for people with disabilities has jumped to the highest rate since before the Covid pandemic, and stands at more than double that of the rate for non-disabled people.With the Mayfield review, the TUC chief, Paul Nowak, believes Labour has an opportunity to turn the page on a decade of Tory neglect of disabled workers.But it will require ministers to take action.“Our employment system is failing disabled people,” he said.“We can’t carry on as we are.

”The big question is how to respond.Who is best placed to help young people, and those with health conditions, to get on in the world of work?Ahead of Rachel Reeves’s budget, business leaders have made clear that their capacity to do much more is at breaking point.But with the public finances in a tight spot, the government, too, has limited room for manoeuvre.On 26 November, the chancellor will be expected to flesh out her promise of a “youth guarantee”, announced at Labour’s annual conference in Liverpool.Investment in skills, training, apprenticeships and further eduction will also be key.

The TUC is warning Reeves against taking a renewed shot at cutting disability benefits, urging her to reform the Access to Work scheme, and to raise statutory sick pay.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionGetting more people into work would be a much better way to cut spending on benefits.It would also benefit the economy: if the UK matched the lowest Neet rate among OECD countries, that could deliver a boost to the economy of £69bn.For business, bosses feel in a strong position to push back against any new government requests to play a bigger role.Unless, of course, it involves a tax break or subsidy.

After the chancellor’s last budget raised employer national insurance contributions (NICs) by £25bn, corporate lobbyists feel emboldened.On the one hand, they have a point.Alongside this tax rise, a higher living wage, elevated borrowing costs, sticky inflation and a sluggish economic outlook, companies are under significant pressure.These headwinds are among the reasons why the jobs market is faltering.Business groups also warn that Labour’s “make work pay” employment rights bill would make matters worse.

Job vacancies have fallen most in the sectors hurt most by the rising cost of employment and fading consumer demand; retail, leisure and hospitality are among the hardest hit.However, these places are also typically the first ports of call for young people and those with health issues who are hoping to get back into the jobs market.But employers refusing to do more to help them would be massively short-termist.Without support, the rise in people standing outside the jobs market will deprive business of potential employees and customers; unemployment would rise further, the economy would suffer, and the public finances would deteriorate.Nobody wins.

“Investment in employee health and wellbeing should not be a burden,” Mayfield told me in Liverpool.“It actually should be something that is both increasingly necessary and also highly returning for employers.“What we have to figure out is, how do we create the circumstances where more employers both feel and experience that?”Businesses might well be under pressure.But equally they cannot opt out either, and say: “Nothing to do with us.” We live in a society where we are all connected.

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Victims robbed of £4bn in ‘insulting’ car loan redress scheme, say claims firms

Victims of the car loans scandal could miss out on more than £4bn in compensation if the City regulator ploughs ahead with plans for an “insulting” interest rate in its redress scheme, consumer groups and claims firms say.The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has been accused of offering a reduced rate of interest which will be added to compensation from banks for borrowers caught up in the car loan commissions scandal.Claims law firms and consumer groups say borrowers should be offered the same terms as Marcus Johnson: the sole driver whose case was upheld by the supreme court in a landmark case in August.While the terms of the final payout are sealed, Johnson is widely believed by industry experts to have received about 7% interest on his compensation package, after judges ordered the parties to negotiate a “commercial rate”. But the watchdog has proposed a rate of 2

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Delivery firm DPD accused of ‘revenge’ sacking drivers who criticised pay cuts

The delivery firm DPD has been accused of “revenge” sackings after workers spoke out against a plan to cut thousands of pounds from their earnings, including their Christmas bonus.The company, which reported pre-tax profits of nearly £200m last year and plays a significant role in the festive rush to have gifts and parcels delivered, has even threatened to withhold money from some staff to pay for the cost of replacing them, the Guardian has learned.DPD confirmed it had dismissed workers after an estimated 1,500 self-employed drivers chose not to take on any work for a three-day period in protest at the plans.It emerged earlier this month that the company had told workers it planned to cut 65p from the rate it pays for most of its deliveries on 29 September.Drivers said the cut, which came to as much as £25 a day, and the loss of a £500 Christmas bonus, was likely to add up to more than £6,000 a year for each worker – and as much as £8,000 for those who take on a lot more deliveries over Christmas

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Knee-jerk corporate responses to data leaks protect brands like Qantas — but consumers are getting screwed

It’s become the playbook for big Australian companies that have customer data stolen in a cyber-attack: call in the lawyers and get a court to block anyone from accessing it.Qantas ran it after suffering a major cybersecurity attack that accessed the frequent flyer details of 5 million customers.The airline joined the long list of companies in Australia, dating back to the HWL Ebsworth breach in 2023, to go to the New South Wals supreme court to obtain an injunction against “persons unknown” – banning the hackers (and anyone else) from accessing or using the data under threat of prosecution.Of course, it didn’t stop hackers leaking the customer data on the dark web a few months later.But it might have come as a surprise when the ID protection company Equifax this month began alerting Qantas customers that their data had been leaked – since access to the data was supposedly banned

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Ducking annoying: why has iPhone’s autocorrect function gone haywire?

Don’t worry, you’re not going mad.If you feel the autocorrect on your iPhone has gone haywire recently – inexplicably correcting words such as “come” to “coke” and “winter” to “w Inter” – then you are not the only one.Judging by comments online, hundreds of internet sleuths feel the same way, with some fearing it will never be solved.Apple released its latest operating system, iOS 26, in September. About a month later, conspiracy theories abound, and a video purporting to show an iPhone keyboard changing a user’s spelling of the word “thumb” to “thjmb” has racked up more than 9m views

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Saracens Women enjoy World Cup bounce with record crowd for derby

If fans had been told at the start of the day to predict which Canada international would be the star of the Premiership Women’s Rugby London derby, most would have picked out Sophie de Goede. The versatile world player of the year is in incredible form, after her starring role in Canada’s run to the Rugby World Cup final just over a month ago, but she did not have the chance to live up to those hypothetical expectations as she failed a fitness test a few hours before kick-off.Such is the Canadian presence at Saracens, though, that another Canuck stood out, with the wing Alysha Corrigan at the heart of the north London club winning 47-10 against Harlequins in this fierce rivalry in front of a record 3,733 spectators.Corrigan produced not only two skilful tries but she was also able to beat several defenders throughout the encounter and had defensive prowess which marked her out at a sunny but cold StoneX Stadium. Canadian flair was on display throughout, with Olivia Apps also an electric presence and Laetitia Royer impressing on her debut

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Coco Gauff’s serving troubles return in WTA Finals defeat against Pegula

Coco Gauff’s serving woes followed her into the final week of the season, as the American’s title defence at the WTA Finals in Riyadh began with a bruising 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-2 loss to her compatriot Jessica Pegula in their first match of the group stages.Despite fighting hard and remaining competitive until the end, the third seed simply could not overcome her 17 double faults against an in-form Pegula, the fifth seed, who maintained her composure after getting pulled into a final set by her struggling opponent, and saved her best level for the closing stretch of the match.Pegula’s victory could prove to be an important win in the Stefanie Graf group, with Aryna Sabalenka looming and favoured to advance. Earlier on Sunday, the world No 1 opened her tournament with a confident 6-3, 6-1 win over Jasmine Paolini, the eighth seed. The victory was Sabalenka’s 60th of the season, the first time she has achieved this milestone

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A third of people in England believe in ghosts, survey finds

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Man who won damages over Richard III film calls for more regulation of fact-based drama

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