The scale of the jobs challenge is clear: data shows that claimant unemployment has already increased by 1.6 million in just two months, and our research estimates that around 10 million workers remain at risk of unemployment. Even without a second wave of the virus, the unemployment rate is forecast to hit double figures this year.

Our analysis also found that local authorities with a higher proportion of furloughed employments are already more likely to have a higher proportion of their population claiming benefits. As the furlough scheme is wound down, and if a comprehensive programme of employment and skills support is not put in place, pre-existing inequalities will be further exacerbated.

Unemployment comes at a high cost, both to individuals and the economy, and this recession is unique for its sectoral nature, meaning a large number of workers will need not only need to find new jobs, but to retrain and switch careers.

We are therefore calling on the Government to put in place a comprehensive and ambitious package of support to avert the worst employment crisis since the Great Depression.

We propose:

  1. A Universal Support Offer to help as many at-risk workers as possible into learning, career planning, or job searching. This should provide online support and one-to-one careers advice, as well as extending current entitlements to free learning up to level three qualifications, for all adults.
  2. A requirement that companies placing furloughed staff at risk of redundancy immediately inform HMRC in order that rapid support can be offered to those workers.
  3. An Into Work Service to help those who need to switch jobs, and an additional 10,000 work coaches to help meet demand for back to work support.
  4. A package of support for workers needing to change careersincluding enhanced career advice, a £5,000 learning account for accredited training, and sector-based Ambition programmes and apprenticeships to bring together businesses and workers.
  5. A time-limited, means-tested Career Changer Grant of up to £3,000, or a Career Changer Premium in Universal Credit, to mitigate wage drops as people move sectors. To incentivise businesses to hire apprentices and career changers, and to pay living wages, the Government should also allow firms to use a proportion of their apprenticeship levy to support wages, with an equivalent grant for SMEs.

In total the proposed package could cost £3.2 billion – or 5 per cent of what the Coronavirus Jobs Retention Scheme is expected to cost. We cannot afford to delay. It is already more than three months since the start of lockdown. As discussed above, waiting for furloughed workers to become unemployed before support is offered risks damaging the recovery and scarring a generation of workers.

19 Mawrth 2026

Labour Market Briefing: March 2026

Our analysis of the ONS labour market statistics, released on the morning of 19 March 2026.

Darllen mwy

19 Mawrth 2026

Labour market stats response, March 2026

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

Darllen mwy

17 Mawrth 2026

Beyond the headline: What emerging qualitative insights tell us about supporting young people into work

Iona McArdle, L&W’s JobsPlus Programme Manager, shares some emerging insights from the JobsPlus evaluation on young people’s experiences of being not in education, employment or training (NEET).

Darllen mwy

16 Mawrth 2026

Responding to the Government’s announcement on expanding opportunities for young people

L&W Chief Executive Stephen Evans responds to the Government’s announcement on expanding opportunities for young people on 16 March 2026.

Darllen mwy

26 Chwefror 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.

Darllen mwy

26 Chwefror 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.

Darllen mwy

17 Chwefror 2026

Labour Market Briefing: February 2026

Our analysis of the ONS labour market statistics, released on the morning of 17 February 2026.

Darllen mwy

17 Chwefror 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.

Darllen mwy

17 Chwefror 2026

Labour market stats response, February 2026

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

Darllen mwy