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Topic for March 2026 - Youth Unemployment

    • 171 posts
    March 26, 2026 5:33 PM GMT

    The Discussion topic for this month is:

    Youth Unemployment and the Education-to-Work Transition

    Youth unemployment in the UK is approaching 1 million, raising questions about the effectiveness of the education-to-work transition and the inclusiveness of our labour market.

    This session aims to explore whether this reflects a cyclical issue or a deeper structural challenge — and what it means for opportunity, productivity and long-term wellbeing in an AI-enabled society.

    Some important key facts follow the agenda.

     

    Agenda

    What do we think are the primary reasons for the recent increase in youth unemployment?
    Is there a breakdown in the transition from education into work?
    Are the main drivers cyclical — or structural?

    Where do the biggest problems lie?
    Are they primarily regional, educational, sectoral or linked to background and family circumstances?
    Are certain groups of young people particularly exposed?
    Is this concentrated in specific places, industries or communities?

    What are the root causes?
    Is there a mismatch between education and employer demand?
    Are employers under-investing in entry-level hiring and training, or becoming more risk-averse in recruitment?
    Do wage, benefit or regulatory structures shape hiring behaviour?
    How significant are mental health challenges and wider disengagement?
    Is there clear ownership of youth employment outcomes — or is responsibility spread too thinly across departments, agencies and employers?

    Is the education-to-work system coherent and effective?
    Does the transition from school, further education and university into employment function well?
    Is there clear ownership and accountability for outcomes across institutions?
    Are we creating enough job opportunities across the economy — in large firms, SMEs and local economies — and are they fulfilling, sustainable and aligned with skill levels, including genuine graduate-level roles?

    What impact will AI have on youth employment?
    Is AI reducing entry-level and routine roles, including junior professional and graduate positions, or creating new forms of opportunity?
    Does it improve skills matching, career guidance and productivity — or concentrate advantage further?
    Will we need to redefine the nature of work, entry-level contribution and career progression in an AI-enabled economy?
    How do we ensure AI expands opportunity rather than narrows it?

    What do we want to achieve?
    What would success look like in 10–20 years?
    Is the objective simply lower unemployment — or broader capability, contribution, social mobility and long-term wellbeing?
    Are we aiming to reduce disengagement, improve transitions, reshape opportunity creation, or redesign aspects of the labour market itself?

    What would genuinely shift outcomes?
    Which actions would materially improve results rather than add programmes or complexity?
    Are there changes — incremental or structural — that could improve transitions, expand opportunity and influence employer behaviour?

    What shifted in our understanding? What haven’t we resolved?
    What new insights emerged — and what requires further exploration?

    Key Facts

    Definitions

    • Youth unemployment refers to 16- to 24-year-olds who are unemployed and actively seeking work, expressed as a percentage of the youth labour force.
    • NEET (Not in Employment, Education or Training) is a broader measure, covering all young people who are neither working nor studying — including both unemployed jobseekers and those who are economically inactive.

    Scale of the Issue

    • There are nearly 1 million 16- to 24-year-olds who are NEET, representing roughly 12–13% of the age group.
    • Within that total, the number who are strictly unemployed (actively seeking work) is lower — around 729,000 in a mid-2025 quarter, according to official data.
    • The youth unemployment rate has risen to around 16%, compared with an overall UK unemployment rate of roughly 5% — indicating youth joblessness remains around three times the national average.

    Recent Trend

    • Over the past two to three years, youth unemployment has increased more sharply than general unemployment, suggesting younger workers have borne a disproportionate share of recent labour market weakening.

    Labour Market Conditions

    • Advertised job vacancies in the UK have fallen from post-pandemic highs to multi-year lows, increasing competition for available roles across sectors.
    • Graduate-level job postings have also declined relative to recent peaks.
    • Consistent with this, recent graduate outcomes data show that around 6% of UK graduates were unemployed approximately 15 months after graduating, a rate significantly lower than the broader youth unemployment rate but still material when scaled to the graduate population.

     

     

     

    • 171 posts
    March 26, 2026 5:36 PM GMT

    The output of this discussion is now available at the following web page:

     

    Youth Unemployment


    This post was edited by # Probably42 at March 26, 2026 5:36 PM GMT