Hughes Urges Milburn to Center 1 Million NEET Youth in Careers Guidance Overhaul
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 4
Hughes Urges Milburn to Center 1 Million NEET Youth in Careers Guidance Overhaul
2 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jun 4
Summary
Dr. Deirdre Hughes said Alan Milburn’s final NEET report due this autumn should put a reformed, properly funded careers guidance system at its core rather than treat the issue mainly as welfare and employment policy.
More than 1 million young people are outside education, employment or training, which Hughes called evidence of system failure rooted in chronic underinvestment in impartial guidance across schools, colleges and communities.
Milburn’s interim review highlighted a £25-to-£1 imbalance between benefits spending and employment support; Hughes argued prevention also needs early, sustained careers intervention before young people reach crisis point.
AI-powered careers tools could widen access for young people outside formal support, she said, but they cannot replace trained advisers, mentoring and ringfenced direct-delivery funding.
The intervention broadens the debate around Milburn’s review, pressing for careers guidance to span education, health and welfare when the final recommendations arrive this autumn.
Is a lack of career advice the true cause of the UK's one million jobless youth?
Why does Britain spend £25 on benefits for every £1 spent on helping young people find work?
Can AI tools fix a youth crisis rooted in mental health and a weak economy?
The NEET Emergency: Why One Million Young Britons Are Not in Education, Employment, or Training—and What Must Change
Overview
In May 2026, the UK faces an urgent crisis with a million young people not in education, employment, or training (NEET). Alan Milburn’s interim review highlights that this is not due to a lack of ambition among youth, but rather deep systemic issues. The review rejects negative stereotypes and calls for a fundamental re-evaluation of current approaches. It shows that most NEETs genuinely want opportunities, but face persistent barriers. Milburn’s findings urge immediate action to address these challenges, emphasizing the need for a more understanding and supportive system to prevent a generation from being left behind.