Community Links

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Posts Tagged ‘unemployment’

New ‘neets’ research challenges ‘layabouts’ label

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Window Image Last week the Audit Commission’s “Against the Odds” report revealed that Young people not in education, employment or training (NEET) at 16-18 have poorer life chances than their peers and are more likely to be a long term cost to public finances.

In a time of austerity, government can ill-afford the estimated £13 billion in public finance costs that will be incurred by the 2008 NEET cohort over their lifetimes. The blight on individual lives is even more appalling, young men who were NEET are three times more likely to suffer from depression, and five times more likely to have a criminal record, than their peers.

This week Community Links publish our new survey of young people not in employment, education or training. Our research suggests that the vast majority want a job and are actively looking for work.  All but two of thirty five NEET young interviewed were keen to work and actively looking for a job. A significant number were also highly qualified but struggling to find work in an increasingly competitive employment market.

“I’ve applied for loads of jobs but I’m up against people with lots more experience who are going for the same jobs as me,” said one young man with ten GCSEs, three ‘A’ levels and a BSC in Computing and Business. “I’ve been to graduate careers fairs where I’m competing for entry level positions with people who have been made redundant from Lehman Brothers and other big firms. It’s incredibly hard to get your foot on the ladder.”

The label NEET covers a diverse group; whilst just over a quarter of the young people interviewed had five or more grade A-C GCSE’s, a similar number had no qualifications at all. More than half of those with no qualifications had been excluded from school.

Only half of the young people who took part in the survey were claiming benefits, relying instead on support from family and friends. The absence of the most basic level of financial support made it extremely difficult for some to stay in education.  One 17 year old described how he had enrolled on a full time course but could not find the £20 per week needed to pay his travel costs. Poverty had a big impact; there have recently been calls to reduce or cut benefits for young people who refuse work or training. But a lack of cash is the very thing causing some young people to fail. Some who simply could not afford the cost of travelling to college, for instance, were abandoning education as a result. One 20 year old woman described how she had been unable to complete a Business Studies degree because she was sharing a two bedroom flat with eight other family members. “Five of us sleep in one room,” she said. “There was just nowhere to work or think and after 18 months I had to leave the course.”

Others from poor backgrounds were giving up on higher education because they were afraid they would be unable to repay high levels of debt accrued to cover tuition fees and living costs.

A more generous level of support for young people in education and training could cut the risk of young people becoming unemployed for extended periods, and reduce the long term cost to society. Taking away financial support by cutting benefits or other punitive measures is likely to have precisely the opposite effect to that intended and lead to greater demands on public finances in the long term.

Read the full report.

First thoughts on Frank Field’s review on poverty and life chances

Monday, June 7th, 2010

http://comlinks.beepweb.co.uk/linksuk/wp-content/images/FrankFieldMP.jpgWe were  pleased to hear the PM announce plans for a new review on poverty and life chances, led by Frank Field, and considering, amongst other aims how to develop services that “nurture children”.

He will:

  • examine the case for reforms to poverty measures, in particular for the inclusion of non-financial elements
  • generate a broader debate about the nature and extent of poverty in the UK
  • explore the effect of a child’s home environment
  • recommend potential action by government and other institutions to reduce poverty and enhance life chances for the least advantaged.

We will be blogging on other aspects of the review in the weeks ahead but note now Fields specific commitments to consider how grass roots groups can transform children’s lives, to learn from others and to producing an action programme.  He told the BBC: “I hope we will have a programme of action, …which the government can actually act on. ……I don’t think we need lots of brilliant new ideas, lots of people have done work, we now need to bring that together and shape it in a way which leads to action.”

With the right community interventions at an early stage we could be doing much more to enable all children to fulfil their potential.   We know some of what works. We do it everyday at Community Links across a network of more than 60 projects in East London and it isn’t rocket science.  Its warm and friendly places where young people can be safe and free to play and learn and grow. Its committed and empathetic staff  that children can trust and respect and it’s the deep value relationships that grow from reliable and constant understanding between service user and provider.

When we were reviewing the Council on Social Action’s unfinished business  before the election we suggested to party leaders  that  a national community support strategy for children and young people, rooted in such approaches,  should be a priority for the new government.  We advised that an effective independent  contribution to developing such a strategy would learn from the successful working process of the Council  and would combine advice and recommendations to government with  concurrent, cross sector action on the ground.  Above all it would seek to understand and, where appropriate, support and develop existing good practice.

The brief for the Field review is not quite the same and as yet we don’t know exactly how it will work but there are clearly many connections. We particularly welcome  the positive commitment to learning from what works and to generating a practical action programme.

We look forward to contributing to the learning and, especially, to the action.

Charlotte’s story – unemployment and the Jobcentre

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Charlotte is 19, lives in East London, and is currently unemployed.

“I left school at 16, with 10 GCSEs. I’ve worked since I was 14, doing cash in hand jobs – waitressing mostly – and I also have an NVQ Level 2 in hair dressing. When I was 17 I had to go on income support because I broke my leg and smashed a vertebra in my back. The Jobcentre was good about that, and they gave me advice, but that was because I wasn’t allowed to work. When I was about 18 I started working formally as a market researcher, but I lost my job in September last year.

I tried as long as possible not to go on benefits, and lived off some savings for as long as I could. But I couldn’t find a job after so long that I had to sign on.

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Poverty is not just about unemployment

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Kate Bell is Director of Policy and Communications at Gingerbread

Gingerbread is the national charity working with single parents. Our new Lets Lose the Labels campaign seeks to challenge the myths and stereotypes that surround single parenthood. Over the past couple of weeks we’ve witnessed a spate of news stories that have shown just why this campaign is needed. We’ve seen single parents referred to as ‘welfare amazons’, reference to an ‘epidemic’ of single mothers, and to ‘growing numbers of mothers…choosing to live alone and relying on state benefits which encourage them “not to bother” settling with a life partner’.

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The Giants who wouldn’t die

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Moussa Haddad is Oxfam’s Sustainable Livelihoods UK Policy Officer, and also blogs at the UK Poverty Post.

What single national policy change would most reduce poverty amongst working age people? That’s the question I’m being asked to address; but before I do so, it’s worth taking a bit of a reality check. There are 13.5 million people who live in poverty in the UK, and of those, there is a pretty much 50/50 split between those in working and in non-working households. So the solutions are not and cannot be clear-cut or one-dimensional. We need more than just one change.

That said, Oxfam works and has worked with a diverse range of people and groups up and down the country, and through all the individual characteristics and unique experiences, one common denominator keeps rearing its head. Designed in particular to tackle want – ‘one of the five giants’ – the social security (or benefit) system is neither particularly effective at this (living in a workless household gives a working-age adult about a 70% chance of being in poverty), nor at empowering people on benefits to improve their circumstances.

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Jobs must go hand in hand with houses if we are to avoid new sink estates developing.

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

James Watkins is Executive Director of Business Voice West Midlands. This post is reproduced with kind permission from the New Start blog

Jobs must go hand in hand with houses if we are to avoid new sink estates developing. That is the message Business Voice WM, the united voice of business in the West Midlands, has been seeking to get across to government.

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People like me need the right training and support to get a job

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

‘Philip’ (not his real name) is unemployed and looking for a job at the moment. He feels that just throwing people into short-term or insecure jobs doesn’t work, because they end up back on benefits soon aftewards.

Government needs to give people more support and try to understand where people want to get to in life, instead of trying to throw them into any old vacancy. If government is helping people get back into work they are helping themselves in the long run – people paying taxes and not claiming benefits. If they just chuck people into rubbish jobs it doesn’t help – six months down the line you’re back on benefits. If you’ve got no training or education and the job goes, you’ve got nothing behind you. People need the right training and support.

This post is part of Community Links and Church Action on Poverty’s project looking at working age poverty, contributing to the European Year Against Poverty

My job is getting people into work – a criminal record is one of the biggest problems

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Sharaf Mahmood is a Jobsearch Tutor in Community Links’ New Deal project, supporting people back to work. It is the most successful New Deal in London and the South East – a success we attribute to the dedication of the staff like Sharaf, who get to know each client individually and support them back into work.

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The importance of good quality jobs

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Chris Goulden is the Policy and Research manager at the Joseph Rowntree Foundation who are launching a new project looking at the future of the labour market and how it might impact on poverty. It’s a perfect start to today’s debate -  on why so many people are working but still in poverty.

People who aren’t children or pensioners are a mixed bunch. There are between 5½ and 7½ million people of working age in poverty in the UK, depending on what measure you want to use.  Of these:

- Nearly one in five is aged 55+ with no dependent children.
- One in nine is of ‘Asian or Asian British’ ethnicity.
- Only one in twenty is a young parent aged 16 to 24.
- One in three has a disabled adult or child in their household.
- Single childless women have experienced the biggest rise in their risk of poverty over the last ten years; single parents have experienced the biggest fall.

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Rich, famous, jobless, and not as bad as I expected

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Rich, famous, and jobless sounded awful – the worst kind of them-vs-us portrayal of poverty. When we were approached last year by the production company, asking if we’d help find unemployed people to feature, we turned them down. But the programme, shown over the last two days, has actually been quite impressive in illustrating some of the issues we come across every day.

In the first show the four ‘celebs’ (let’s be honest, we’d only ever heard of Larry Lamb), were given 4 days of Jobseekers Allowance (about £35), and told to find a job. In an incredibly artificial situation – followed by a camera and with only 4 days to work – they still learnt some important lessons. Not least the cruelty of the way wages are deducted from benefits, leaving people working for what seems like nothing. Neither of the two who found work were very keen to give back their ‘benefits’. They also realised quickly the difficulty of living on £65 a week, and the seemingly-small but almost insurmountable barriers that such low income presents – not being able to afford the bus fare to the interview, for example.

In last night’s show, they were packed off to various areas of the country to spend a few days living with people who were unemployed for a variety of reasons. It threw up some incongruous moments – Larry Lamb as marriage counsellor particularly stuck in my mind – but also some instructive lessons. The biggest of which is that each unemployed person, in their different ways, seemed to benefit hugely from a bit of personal attention from someone who cared. It wasn’t something they were getting at the Jobcentre.

The middle class elbows of one ‘celeb’ managed to get her host some work experience in a zoo (although where that’s leading is another matter). The dangerously severe approach of an Irish landscape gardener towards his hosts – a couple with 5 children living on benefits – betrayed his cringing lack of understanding of the barriers many people face, but even they seemed genuinely moved by his austere concern. And when Noel Gallagher’s ex-wife accompanied ex-offender Nick to the Jobcentre, she admitted their hostile approach towards him had almost turned her violent. No wonder Nick was struggling to find work, when that’s the kind of support he was getting.

At Community Links we have talked many times before about the importance of building meaningful relationships with individuals to really achieve change. These programmes illustrated well the two main problems with the benefits system. Its perverse financial disincentives to work in many situations, and the lack of personal support it provides to individuals for whom that could make all the difference. If these programmes have gone some way towards making that more obvious to the public, that can only be a good thing.

One point of concern – the way they seemed to leave the unemployed people they featured. The farewells were presented as emotional and final. I sincerely hope the television company wasn’t heartless enough to severely disrupt people’s lives for four days and then leave them high and dry.