Responding to the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s spending review, Stephen Evans, Chief Executive of Learning and Work Institute (L&W), said:

“We welcome confirmation of previously announced rises in employment support for disabled people, which can make a real difference. We’re also pleased to see the Chancellor highlight the importance of skills, and to see funding of extra 16-19 places to meet demographic demand. Yet there doesn’t appear to be much, if any, extra funding for adults to improve their skills. Whereas we know that when adults learn, our society and economy thrive. The Chancellor faces tough economic and fiscal conditions and is right to prioritise. That raises the importance of broader action to raise employer investment in training, and to better join up programmes so they have a bigger impact. 80% of our 2035 workforce have already left compulsory education, and skills funding in England has been cut by £1 billion since 2010. Details on the Growth and Skills Levy, and any plans to help employers reverse the 26% fall in their spending on training since 2005, will also need to wait for a skills strategy later this year.”

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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.

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3 March 2026

Responding to the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s spring statement 2026

L&W’s Director of Policy and Research Dr Emily Andrews responds to the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s spring statement on 3 March 2026.

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2 March 2026

When it comes to lifelong learning, are we any closer to the College of the Future?

Stephen Evans, Chief Executive at Learning and Work Institute, reflects on the role of colleges in providing adults with opportunity and agency throughout their lives.

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2 March 2026

Why adult education is an investment, not a cost

David Hughes, CEO at the Association of Colleges, sets out why a well-funded, high-quality adult education system is beneficial to society and the economy.

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26 February 2026

New innovation trial offers young Londoners with health conditions tailored support to get ‘work ready’

Shaw Trust is funding and designing a new service to help young people with a health condition or disability get ‘work ready.’ The innovation trial will be evaluated by L&W and launched in partnership with the West London Alliance.

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26 February 2026

Responding to the latest NEET data, February 2026

Learning and Work Institute chief executive Stephen Evans responds to the NEET data released on 26 February 2026.

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17 February 2026

Labour market stats response, February 2026

L&W’s chief executive Stephen Evans responds to the latest labour market data from ONS.

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20 January 2026

Labour market stats response, January 2026

L&W’s chief executive Stephen Evans responds to the latest labour market data from ONS.

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16 January 2026

From strength to strength: JobsPlus in Toxteth

Reflections from one of our delivery providers for JobsPlus, a new community-led approach to help people find work and boost their earnings. JobsPlus is being piloted on 10 sites across England, following the model’s success in the United States.

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