Sarah Champion: Failure to invest in future for the young

IN the lead-up to the Budget, I argued that the Chancellor should use this opportunity to demonstrate a clear Government strategy to support young people and, in particular, I hoped to see him signal a strong commitment to apprenticeships. I therefore welcome the Chancellor saying that he will double the number of apprenticeships, but unfortunately that is not enough to bridge the skills gap.

The current figures paint a grim picture: almost one million young people are still not in education, employment or training, and today more than 730,000 more young people are out of work or underemployed than in 2005. We are seeing the beginnings of a generational crisis that will not only cause problems for young people today, but create a skills gap that will follow them into the future.
If we do not give our young people the training they need to work now, the future of our long-term economy will be at stake.

The impact of the Government’s choices does not end with the economy, because the quality of life enjoyed by our children, and our children’s children, will also be affected. I do not want future generations to worry about where their next meal is coming from, or whether they can afford to heat their house, because they were not given the chance to develop vital career skills when they were young. That is why I felt it so important for the Chancellor to use this Budget to invest more in young people’s skills and training.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Young people want to work. We know that, but there is still a lot more we can do to invest in their future. Regardless of the Chancellor saying that he will add 100,000 apprenticeships, the number 
of new apprentices fell by more than 25,000 in the past year. In addition, 
there are now more than 5,000 fewer under-19s starting apprenticeships than there were in 2009.

Supply of apprenticeship opportunities is simply not keeping up with rising demand. Added to that are concerns that many apprentices are not receiving the legal minimum wage, and a recent survey showed that 29 per cent of apprentices are not being paid enough. What does the Budget do for apprentices who are not getting the minimum wage? What does it do for young people who want a job but cannot find one?

I still believe that apprenticeships are not being taken seriously enough by this Government. The level of apprenticeship applications outstrips the number of available places by 12 to one, and the Chancellor’s announcements will do little to address that.

Nationally, think-tanks have reported that England currently has only 11 apprentices in place for every 1,000 jobs. Now is the time for us to turn the tables and invest in young people by creating more apprenticeships of greater quality.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The Chancellor says that his plan is working, but if he really had a convincing plan, he would have built into the Budget serious and credible measures to support young people, safeguarding the economy for the future.

Allow me to paint a picture of the crisis in my constituency. The census showed that more than 50 per cent of young people in Rotherham are either unemployed or economically inactive.

Let me say that again: more than half of Rotherham’s young people are without a job. They want to work but they have nowhere to turn. Scandalously, that is not even the worst of it. If we compare the number of young people in my constituency who have claimed Jobseeker’s Allowance for a year under this Government with the equivalent in the last four years of the Labour government, we see that the figure has increased dramatically. Indeed, I was flabbergasted to find out that that figure had increased not by 20 or even 50 per cent, but by an incredible 760 per cent.

I wish to make a plea to the Chancellor: it is time to start taking the youth unemployment crisis seriously, and it is time to invest the Government’s Budget in young people because they are our future business leaders, construction workers, engineers, and scientists.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

If we do not act today, we risk creating a generational skills gap.

Our society needs a strong, motivated and skilled young workforce who will serve Britain not just now, but for long into the future.

Young people need serious Budget commitments to support them, not the Budget we were given that clearly supports the richest few at the expense 
of all others.

Sarah Champion is the Labour MP for Rotherham who spoke in the Budget debate in Parliament. This is an edited version.