Young people must "earn or learn" or face having their benefits cut, under government plans to get them back into work and grow the economy.
I recall the backlash when the last government annouced this. Yet there's been little outrage from the usual suspects this time around. Isn't that strange?
Official figures suggest nearly a million young people were out of education, employment or training between July and September. Job centres and mental health support will get more funding to help people into work, the government has said.
However, business leaders have said rises in employer National Insurance contributions and minimum wages will leave them less money to create new jobs. The BBC has spoken to young people yet to enter the workforce, as well as those with different reasons for leaving it.
Which was quite brave of them, but I don't think they realised what they were going to say...
Hassan, 20, from Birmingham, finished his A levels in 2022 and has been out of work ever since. “This year has been kind of a constant struggle. I want to get a job but how do I get a job? And how do I write the right CV? And how do I apply for things?” He is receiving help with these struggles from the King's Trust.
This is a product of our education system?
Hassan missed out on sitting his GCSE exams because of the Covid pandemic and said sitting formal exams for the first time at 18 was "overwhelming". “I realised what I had been calling 'stress' for many years was actually anxiety. I had been carrying it with me for so long," he said. “There’s a lot of talk these days about mental health. But a lot of people think it’s overrepresented… that makes you feel uncertain about trying to identify these problems you deal with in your daily life.”
Those are just the normal vicissitudes of life. No-one's going to hand you anything on a platter, and if they told you they would, that's yet another failure of the educational system.
Amy Wilkes, 23, from Coventry has a degree in criminology, policing and investigation but said she gets no responses when she applies for jobs. “It’s really frustrating, soul-destroying and gutting," said Amy, who has been volunteering with the witness service for over a year. “It is very hard to find a job, let alone a career,” she said.
She told the BBC her morale can get low sometimes, and that she occasionally struggles emotionally, especially as “applying for loads of jobs is draining”.
Another one who believed that if she gained a degree, plum jobs would land in her lap without any effort on her part. The fact that 'life is hard' seems not to have been imparted very well.
But if you've got a 'disability' to fall back on...
Kiarna, 18, from Birmingham said her struggle to find a job began at sixth form where she felt misunderstood because of her learning difficulties and mental health struggles. “I went to college... but I felt like they didn’t understand me, they would moan at me, have a go at me. They didn’t understand that for someone with learning difficulties it’s really hard to learn stuff. It takes longer to make it click in your head," she said. Kiarna said the lack of support and structure after she finished formal education had also been a barrier in finding work. She is now receiving help from the Kings Trust.
And yet, the Royals get no thanks or even recognition for providing a service to mop up the results of our educational system from the Left.
I have long thought that if umpty-squillion able-bodied people are choosing to live on benefits, that just proves that the benefits are too generous. The solution seems obvious...
ReplyDeleteSee also here https://www.frombearcreek.com/rule-five-tenth-annual-commencement-speech-friday/
Obvious to everyone whose livelihood doesn't depend on them....
DeleteIt shows the level of intelligence of the numpties in government by threatening the stopping of unemployment benefits of people who don't work while, at the same time, making it more difficult, financially, for employers to take on staff. The clowns really have taken over the circus.
ReplyDeletePenseivat
Sadly, yes...
Delete"Job centres and mental health support will get more funding to help people into work" That will be as successful as it was the last time it was mooted. It's typical politician bollox: There's a problem? Let's put on a show by throwing other people's money at it . . .
ReplyDeleteI have heard it so very many times now...
DeleteI worked for a University where applicants for jobs were told that if they hadn't heard for X days then they should assume they'd been rejected. What sort of a discourtesy is that? Especially as it didn't take a letter, envelope or stamp, just (in the majority of cases) an e mail. Useless HR bastards.
ReplyDeleteIt's not a good way to treat anyone, but that's the role of HR these days, it seems.
DeleteI think that practical skills are the thing that young people need to become more employable. Being able to make and fix things are skills that will always be in demand. The fact that the generation that could do this stuff is now moving toward retirement means that these skills are likely to be more in demand.
ReplyDeleteSince we have a shortage of plasterers bricklayers and plumbers, yes.
DeleteIn the early 1980s I was finding it difficult to find a permanent job. I took quite a few temporary jobs so there was a period when I was in and out of work a lot. My encounters with the Job Centre and an organisation called The Manpower Services Commission were entirely negative. Every job that I managed to land was entirely down to my own efforts, these government organisations were absolutely no help at all and wasted a lot of my time.
ReplyDeleteSo, typical government organisations then? Perhaps the real issue was they weren't set up to help who you assumed they were?
Delete