Government announces major programme to tackle inequalities in youth unemployment
Prime Minister announces £90m programme to help tackle inequalities
in youth unemployment highlighted by Race Disparity Audit’s website
Ethnicity Facts and Figures website shows 16 to 24 year olds
from ethnic minority groups twice as likely to be unemployed as
white peers Initiative will be run by Big Lottery Fund and
supported by DCMS, DfE and DWP to help young people overcome
barriers to employment Theresa May also...Request free trial
Prime Minister Theresa May has announced the launch of an
innovative new programme to address ethnic disparities in youth
unemployment and to help disadvantaged young people get into
work.
The announcement comes after Theresa May’s challenge to society to
‘explain or change’ disparities in how people from different
backgrounds are treated, following the publication of
the Race Disparity Audit –
the government’s ground-breaking audit of public services, from
central government to local communities, launched last
October.
The £90m youth programme, designed jointly
by the Big Lottery Fund, DCMS, DfE and DWP, will be shaped by
evidence from the Race Disparity Audit, which highlighted the
differences in outcomes facing young people from different
backgrounds in different parts of England.
It will offer young people the chance to
work directly with educators and youth and community
organisations – who will consider how their skills can benefit
their local communities and businesses.
Young people will feed into the programme’s
design, working with educators, youth and community organisations
and businesses to demonstrate how their skills and talents can
benefit their local economies.
Today’s announcement marks the start of an
engagement phase which will see the government and the Big
Lottery Fund running a series of workshops with young people from
across the country to gather evidence about the unique challenges
they face in making the transition from education to
employment.
The Prime Minister also today announces the
Race Disparity Audit Advisory Group, chaired by Simon Woolley.
The Advisory Group will challenge, steer and support government
departments to develop interventions to tackle disparities found
in the Audit - and will drive civil society, businesses and
local government to take action.
Figures from the Ethnicity Facts and
Figures website show that young people from ethnic minorities
between the ages of 16 and 24 are almost twice as likely to be
unemployed (23%) as their white peers (12%) – despite having
similar qualifications.
Later today, the Prime Minister will visit
a Birmingham-based youth employment charity, which has helped
thousands of young people to find work since 2010. The charity
runs programmes helping unemployed 16 to 24 year-olds develop key
skills in team work, leadership, communication and discipline –
providing them with the necessary skills to gain qualifications
and work experience so they can move into sustainable employment
or further training.
On the visit, Theresa May will speak to young people
about the barriers they have experienced in finding work, and
will also meet young people who have successfully completed
training and gone into full-time employment.
Prime Minister Theresa May said:
“Youth unemployment blights communities and
wastes talent and potential – and too many young people from
deprived and ethnic minority backgrounds face barriers preventing
them from entering the world of work.
“Evidence from the Race Disparity Audit clearly shows that while the educational attainment gap
between people of different backgrounds has narrowed over time,
this has not been reflected in getting jobs.
“Talent, ability and hard work should be
the only factors affecting a young person’s ability to get on in
life – not their background or ethnicity.
“The launch of this ambitious programme,
which has young people at its heart and draws on their direct
experiences, will help to address the barriers holding many young
lives back, and will support young people furthest from the
labour market into employment, so they can achieve their full
potential.”
Dawn Austwick, Chief Executive of
the Big Lottery Fund, said:
“Young people who are facing multiple
barriers to employment are the
best placed to tell us what needs to change for them.
“They will be at the heart of the process
to shape solutions and create a dormant accounts youth programme
that works for them by working with employers, educators, youth
and community organisations.”
Simon Woolley, Chair of the Race
Disparity Advisory Group and Director of Operation Black Vote,
said:
"This intervention is driven by the Prime
Minister's leadership with support from NGOs. Our role is to find
out where and how we can make the biggest impact on a range of
issues including youth unemployment and the ethnic disparities
within it."
Notes to
editors:
The engagement phase from now until May
will aim to develop a high impact youth unemployment programme to
include:
The RDA Advisory
Group members are: Arun
Batra, Ernst & Young; Jeremy
Crook, Black Training and Enterprise
Group; Carol Lake, JP
Morgan; Anne Foster,
SONY; Samuel Kasumu, Elevation Network;
and Baroness Ruby McGregor-Smith, Author of
‘Race in the Workplace’
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