Articles

Labour Market

Enjoying your job is not a human right

Brace yourself, but I don’t mind Michelle Obama. Sure, she might prattle on about the evils of white, corporate America too much for my liking, but the former First Lady certainly doesn’t suffer fools gladly, and this was on full display at this week’s SXSW festival in London. Addressing the crowd, Obama warned young people […]

Policy

The £100bn investment gap behind Britain’s jobs crisis

Youth unemployment is one of those issues that politicians across the spectrum agree is a scandal. The debate tends to focus on training programmes, welfare incentives, employer subsidies. These things matter. But a report published today by the Jobs Foundation points to something more fundamental: the businesses that would employ young people are not growing […]

Policy

We won’t get young people working without welfare reform

Too many of Britain’s next generation are in danger of being cut adrift from the world of work. The latest figures show that one in eight of those aged 16-24 are currently not in education, employment or training – or NEETs. Such a figure – which equates to more 957,000 people – has been unimaginable […]

Policy

The Government’s employment grant won’t get Britain working

Today’s labour market statistics are the usual jumble of sometimes conflicting indicators, based on different periods and using different methodologies. However, it is clear that the unemployment rate is continuing its slow upward creep, with the overall rate now at 5.2%, the highest since the Covid pandemic (when an understandable blip reversed a long trend […]

Policy

Businesses are drowning in Britain’s HR swamp

Britain is a world leader! Nope, not in economic growth, opportunity or general happiness, but in the size of its human resources industry. Just when it seems as though the 2020s couldn’t get any more joyless, Blighty outdoes itself. A new report from the think tank Policy Exchange exposes just how large and overbearing our […]

Policy

Labour will never ‘make work pay’

‘We came into work on a manifesto to make work pay’, Jo Stevens, Labour’s Welsh Secretary, told Radio 4 this week. ‘And that’s exactly what we’re doing.’ Well, Ms. Stevens, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has a different story to tell. Youth unemployment is now at its highest level in 11 years. Almost one […]

Labour Market

Labour are waging war on British jobs

Ministers have tried for months to hand-wave away Britain’s increasingly desperate jobs figures with unconvincing excuses. ‘It’s AI, it’s global factors, it’s post-pandemic adjustment, it’s bad data,’ go the refrains of the unlucky few foisted on the media round for the monthly ONS release. The increasingly obscure ministers Labour HQ have put up may play […]

Labour Market

Nigel Farage is wrong about working from home

While the Covid pandemic was a pretty universally horrible experience, one of the few positives to emerge from it was the rise of working from home. For a great many people, no longer having to commute into the office five days a week has been a great boon. However, there are a certain number of […]

Economics

Flexible working isn’t a free lunch

Before Covid, flexible work was an unusual perk. But as lockdown upended our way of life, the drive for working when, where and how an employee chooses accelerated. Insofar as there has been a return to the pre-pandemic era, it has been limited. In some quarters, the idea that workers might be obliged to follow […]

Labour Market

The young will pay the price of the ‘Reeves recession’

When Labour took office in July 2024, Britain’s unemployment rate stood at 4.2%. Today it is 5.1%, the highest level since early 2021 and rising in a way that should trouble any Chancellor, especially one who has produced two tax-raising Budgets in succession. Ministers say the labour market is simply normalising, but the pattern now […]

Education

Let’s give Britain’s young people a chance

This article is the latest in a fortnightly series of policy proposals from John Penrose and the Centre for Small State Conservatives. You can read the previous instalments here. This week, the Government announced a multi-million-pound boost for apprenticeships in an attempt to improve young people’s life chances with a smoother transition from school into education, work […]

Labour Market

Don’t be fooled by Labour’s new workers’ rights

Time and time again, politicians will promise new ‘rights’. These rights are usually in the form of new regulations, and are generally taken at face value, with the smiling faces of the beneficiaries being propagated as proof of its success.  The French economist Bastiat called this the ‘seen’ vs the ‘unseen’. The ‘seen’ is what […]

Labour Market

Young people are the victims of Labour’s war on business

Earlier this month, in an attempt to gain credibility and trust from SMEs, Reform UK hosted a press conference to set out its priorities for small businesses in Britain. Some 300 small and medium-sized business owners attended the event, which also drew support from Checkatrade founder Kevin Byrne and Tory donor Anthony Bamford of JCB. […]

Economics

If Britain wants growth, innovation is not enough

It is a familiar lament of British policymakers that the UK invents everything and profits from nothing. The world wide web, nuclear energy, the ARM processors that now power every iPhone and many AI data centres – not to mention railways. All were invented in the United Kingdom; all are now largely scaled and monetised […]

Labour Market

The welfare state risks writing off a generation

A generation of Britons are being cut off from the wider world.  Last month, it was reported that two thirds of Gen Z sometimes stay inside for days on end. We at the Centre for Social Justice have previously found that seven in ten 18- to 24-year-olds feel lonely. Now new ONS data shows us […]

Labour Market

Rachel Reeves doesn’t understand young people

One can’t help but feel a bit sorry for Labour’s youth cohort. Having been born in the dying days of New Labour and come of age during 14 years of Conservative government, last year’s election victory was the culmination of an adolescence spent leafleting, campaigning and most painfully, waiting. Yet for those who attended the […]