Our third Better Work Conference brought together people working in central and local government, education, training and skills providers, third sector organisations and business to discuss how we can improve access to high quality jobs and boost the living standards of workers. 

Four in five low-paid workers say the cost-of-living crisis is the worst financial period they have ever faced. The impacts of the crisis are made worse by two decades of lost wage growth, and the prevalence of low-paid, often insecure jobs that fail to act as stepping stones into future careers. Labour shortages and rising economic inactivity have also shone light on the links between work and health, the importance of flexible working and job satisfaction.

The conference included panel discussions, breakout sessions and a networking lunch, with an emphasis on sharing innovative practice. The programme explored different dimensions of job quality, covering key issues relevant to today’s labour market that included:  

  • The link between the quality of work and mental health and wellbeing of workers 
  • The role of workforce development in boosting businesses and communities 
  • Opportunities to advance worker rights and prevent exploitation of workers  
  • How a strengthened safety net could improve quality of work and benefit workers 
  • Flexible work and its capability to boost participation, productivity and satisfaction

Find out more about the Better Work Network

The Better Work Conference was organised through the Better Work Network, a policy and practice-based initiative which aims to support progression from low pay and improve job quality for all.

Read more

29 June 2026

What enables the effective design, delivery and evaluation of local work and health programmes?

This report presents findings from an evidence review on what enables the effective design, delivery and evaluation of local health and work programmes.

Read more

29 June 2026

Scoping report: Labour Market Evidence Programme

This scoping report as part of the Labour Market Evidence programme provides a summary of the work undertaken by IES and L&W between October 2025 and March 2026 including user consultation. It summarises the evidence needs of local policy makers and sets out how these needs can be addressed.

Read more

9 June 2026

Final report: Evaluation of the JobsPlus Pilot

This evaluation of JobsPlus builds on the interim findings published in September 2025 to provide evidence on whether the model can be adapted to the UK context and effectively implemented to improve employment outcomes.  

Read more

19 May 2026

Labour market dashboard

Every month, Learning and Work Institute produces detailed and timely analysis of the latest labour market statistics from ONS. Explore our interactive charts.

Read more

1 April 2026

Supporting the progression of low-income workers in Scotland

With funding from the Robertson Trust, Learning and Work Institute has been working in partnership with Edinburgh College to develop a pilot to support low-income workers in Scotland to progress into better jobs.

Read more

1 April 2026

Final report: Supporting the progression of low-income workers in Scotland

This report shares findings from the second phase of our programme of work funded by the Robertson Trust and delivered in partnership with Edinburgh College. It sets out a proposed model for a new, evidence-led, in-work progression programme in Edinburgh.

Read more

13 March 2026

UK’s training and skills ‘tick-box culture’ puts at risk job mobility and future growth, new report warns

New analysis has identified an overreliance on mandatory and compliance training in UK workplaces compared to other countries – at the expense of more in-depth upskilling required for the jobs of the future.

Read more

13 March 2026

Training and skills needs: Trends and challenges in UK growth sectors

This report, the second in a series of publications funded by Nuffield Foundation, explores the level of estimated skills needs in UK businesses alongside the level and type of training that employers provide.

Read more

24 December 2025

Falling short: Understanding further falls in employer training

This briefing looks at how employer investment in training continues to fall – now down 36% per employee since 2005 – and argues that we must turn this around to improve economic growth.

Read more