New research reveals a striking divide in England's adult skills
landscape. Young adults (aged 16-24) have made significant
improvements in literacy and numeracy since 2012, reversing a
position that once placed them among the lowest performers
internationally. However, despite this improvement, approximately
one in five working-age adults still lacks proficiency in basic
literacy, numeracy or both, and the majority of these adults are
aged over 45.
The findings draw on the Survey of Adult Skills 2023 (PIAAC), an
international study assessing literacy, numeracy and
problem-solving across 31 countries. NFER has published two
reports with further analysis of this data: one examining what
has happened to England's young adults since 2012, and
the other analysing the characteristics and labour market
outcomes of the 8.5 million adults in England who have low skills in 2023.
In 2012, England's 16-24-year-olds were among the lowest
performers internationally. A decade on, the proportion of
16–24-year-olds with low literacy skills has almost halved and
also reduced for numeracy. England's youngest adults now perform
strongly compared with other countries. Further, the cohort who
were aged 16-24 in 2012 have made larger gains through their 20s
than their counterparts in most other countries surveyed and are
no longer amongst the lowest performers.
There are some key differences between 16-24-year-olds in 2012
and 2023:
- Women have improved significantly in both literacy and
numeracy, while men have significantly improved in numeracy only.
- Young adults today, and their parents, are more likely to be
educated to a higher level, which may reflect the impact of
education reforms like the education leaving age being raised to
age 18.
- Encouragingly, young people with the lowest qualifications
have not fallen further behind.
- Other background factors, including gender and
socio‑economic status, now play a smaller role in shaping
skills outcomes than they did in 2012.
However, the research shows that around 8.5 million working age
adults in England still have low literacy or numeracy skills.
Literacy skills across the adult population have shown no marked
improvement over the decade, even as qualification levels have
risen. Women also continue to have lower numeracy skills than
men, a pattern seen across most comparator countries.
Over half of all low-skilled adults are now aged 45 and over, and
adults aged 45 and over are increasingly likely to have left the
workforce entirely. This is unlike young low-skilled adults.
Since 2012, the proportion of 16–24-year-olds with low literacy
skills has almost halved, falling from 20 per cent to 11 per
cent, with low numeracy skills dropping from 19 per cent to 13
per cent. Young adults also showed greater mobility between jobs
and sectors over time.
The employment picture remains concerning. Only 55-56 per cent of
low-skilled adults were in employment in 2023, compared with 75
per cent of adults overall and 61-64 per cent of low-skilled
adults across other countries surveyed.
Adults born outside the UK, or who learnt English as an
additional language are overrepresented in the low skills group.
However, they are less likely to have low skills in England than
in several major economies, including France, Italy and the
United States.
Rebecca Wheater, NFER Research Director said:
"It is very encouraging to see such clear improvements in the
skills of young adults, who now compare well internationally and
are entering the workforce with stronger foundations than we saw
a decade ago.
“However, a significant number of adults continue to have low
levels of literacy and numeracy, which can significantly limit
employment opportunities.
"NFER's Skills Imperative 2035
programme shows that the need for essential employment skills
will continue to grow as jobs evolve, and ensuring adults can
build and sustain skills is key to meeting the demands of the
future labour market."
ENDS℗ NOTES TO EDITORS
- This is the second cycle of the Survey of Adult Skills.
England last participated in 2012. The 2023
survey was carried out in 31 countries during 2022 and
2023.
- In England, the 2023 survey was carried out on behalf of the
Government by a consortium led by Verian in partnership with the
National Centre for Social Research (NatCen) and the National
Foundation for Educational Research (NFER).
- 4941 adults aged 16 to 65 participated in the survey, in
their homes, between September 2022 and June 2023.
- Participating countries: Austria, Canada, Chile, Croatia,
Czechia, Denmark, England, Estonia, Finland, Flemish Community
(Belgium), France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Italy,
Japan, Korea, Latvia, Lithuania, Netherlands, New
Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Singapore, Slovak Republic,
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United States
- 'Low skills' refers to attainment at Level 1 or below on the
PIAAC scale.
- The estimate of 8.5 million adults with low skills refers to
adults aged 16-65 with low proficiency in literacy, numeracy or
both (Wheater et al., 2024). The equivalent estimate in 2012 was
approximately 9 million.
-
The Skills Imperative
2035: NFER is leading a strategic research partnership,
funded by the Nuffield Foundation, to identify the essential
employment skills people will need for work by 2035.