Milburn says migrants not to blame for Neets crisis but falling immigration creates ‘opportunity’ – UK politics live | Politics


Milburn says employers need ‘new deal’ to help encourage them to hire more young Britons as immigration falls

Q: According to a thinktank report, 27 young non-EU migrants have been hired for every one Briton since 2020. Do you think employers should have to offer jobs to British young people first?

Milburn said he thought that would happen anyway because immigration levels are falling. (See 12.20pm.)

But he said employers would need more support from government to allow this to happen. He explained:

double quotation markYou bring in a migrant worker. They’re often experienced. They’re often a bit older. There’s a high work appetite.

A young person might well have a big work appetite, but they’ve had no work experience, never been exposed to the world of work, never had an opportunity to have that Saturday job, a bit of work experience.

And so this is going to mean that employers are going to have to work a bit harder in order to get the very best out of those young British workers. But that’s what they should be doing.

And the deal that we need to construct as a society is if employers are going to do that, how can the government help them and enable them to do that as well?

That’s the new deal. And it’s an important one in a world where levels of migration are seemingly on … a pretty clear downward trajectory.

Key events

4 charts from Milburn’s report on Neets showing why he says crisis getting worse

Here are four charts from Alan Milburn’s report on Neets that illustrate why he says the crisis is getting worse.

1) How UK’s youth Neet rate is getting worse compared to other European countries

How UK’s Neet rate getting worse compared to other European countries Photograph: Milburn report

The report says:

double quotation markThe UK now sits above the average youth Neet rate for high-income countries, the EU and the OECD. In 2025 the EU average for 15 to 24-year-olds was 9%, compared with 12.8% for 16- to 24-year-olds in the UK at the end of 2025. The gap is no longer just with the strongest performers. In 2014, the UK was around the European average. By 2025, only Romania recorded a higher rate.

2) How Neet rates are going up by gender

How Neet rates are increasing by gender Photograph: Milburn report

In the past young women were more likely to be Neet than young men, but that has changed. The report says:

double quotation markIn 2012, the UK female Neet rate exceeded the male rate by 1.8 percentage points. By 2024 males were 2.9 points higher, at 14.3% compared with 11.4%. The improvement for women reflects, in significant part, the decline in teenage pregnancy, with the under-18 conception rate in England and Wales falling 66% between 2007 and 2022.

3) How disability rates are rising for Neets, and for all young people

How disability rates are rising for Neets, and for all young people Photograph: Miliburn report

The report says:

double quotation markIn 2024/25, nearly half of young people who are Neet in the UK, 45%, report having a disability – more than doubling from 21.1% in 2013/14. Disability prevalence among all 16- to 24-year-olds has also doubled, from 10% to 19.7% over the last ten years. Young people considered to have special educational needs or disabilities (Send) are around 80% more likely to be Neet than average.

4) Proportion of Neets with particular health conditions

Proportion of Neets with particular health condidtions Photograph: Milburn report
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