Young unemployed people will be offered training or job opportunities in construction, care and hospitality as part of a UK government scheme, but could have their benefits cut if they do not take up offers.
Pat McFadden, the work and pensions secretary, announced on Sunday that 350,000 new training or workplace opportunities would be offered to young people on universal credit, but added there would be âsanctionsâ for claimants who did not engage.
The policy is part of the Labour governmentâs plans to halt the increase in the number of young people not in education, employment or training (Neet). Britain has almost a million Neets aged 16 to 24, in what some experts have called a youth jobs crisis.
Rachel Reeves announced ÂŁ820m in funding at her budget last month for a âyouth guaranteeâ of a six-month paid work placement for every eligible 18- to 21-year-old who has been on universal credit and looking for work for 18 months.
The job guarantee programme will start in the spring, with up to 55,000 young people in line. The government said the jobs would be in areas with some of the highest need, including: Birmingham and Solihull, the East Midlands, Greater Manchester, Hertfordshire and Essex, central and east Scotland, and south-west and south-east Wales.
McFadden also announced that 900,000 young people would be given a âdedicated work support sessionâ, followed by four weeks of âintensive supportâ to try to find work experience, training or a job.
He told the BBCâs Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg that the government had an âexpectationâ that young people would take up the work.
Asked if young people could lose benefits if they donât cooperate, McFadden said: âYes, sanction is part of the system. This is an offer on one hand, but itâs an expectation on the other, because the future we donât want for young people is to be sitting at home on benefits when there are other options out there.â
Ben Harrison, the director of the Work Foundation, a thinktank based at Lancaster University, said the funding and the prospect of more intensive work coaching was welcome, but warned the overall effects could be harmful if the threat of sanctions pushes people into unsuitable or insecure jobs.
âEvidence from the UK and overseas is clear that these schemes must focus on connecting individuals to âgoodâ jobs with a living wage, job security and opportunities to progress if they are to lead to long-term sustained employment,â he said.
âIf reforms end up pushing young people into âany jobâ under the threat of benefit sanctions, they may do more harm than good to their future work prospects. Nearly half of young people currently not in education, employment or training report are disabled, so it is vital that participants have some agency over the types of jobs and sectors they work in.â
Harrison highlighted that the hospitality, care and construction sectors targeted by the government often provided insecure work, making it difficult for people to step up to longer-term stability.
The Department for Work and Pensions said there was âan expectation that young people will take up the opportunities they are offered, and sanctions to benefits could be applied for those who donât engage with the offered support without good reasonâ.