‘Worlds apart’ is the second report produced as part of our Ambition Skills programme of work. It finds the UK has larger gaps in workforce skills between different parts of the country than most other European countries, and that closing the gap between London and the rest of the UK would require 4.1 million more people to gain higher education qualifications outside London.

L&W’s first Ambition Skills report, ‘The great skills divide’, showed the UK lagging other countries on skills, with government funding £1 billion lower in England than in 2010 and employers investing 26% less per employee than in 2005.

Our latest analysis finds that:

  • You are three times as likely to be qualified below GCSE level in the West Midlands (27%), the area with the worst qualification profile, than in West London (9%), the area with the best qualification profile.
  • Another 290,000 people, the equivalent of the population of Coventry, would have GCSE-equivalent qualifications in the West Midlands if the UK had lower inequality like in Denmark, France and Sweden.
  • The UK’s postcode lottery in skills is on track to worsen over the next decade: while 71% of Londoners may have a higher education qualification by 2035, only 29% would in Hull and East Yorkshire.
  • The missing 4 million graduates risk holding back economies outside London, and improving skills in an area on its own will not be enough. Without action to improve jobs and opportunities across the country, people in low-skill areas who gain new qualifications may continue to follow the better-paid jobs into cities like London, Leeds, Bristol and Brighton.

Find out more about Ambition Skills

Our Ambition Skills programme of work, supported by City & Guilds and NOCN, builds a shared vision bringing together stakeholders across the learning and skills sectors.

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22 December 2025

From confusion to clarity: rethinking England’s 670 occupational standards

L&W’s Stephen Evans and Pearson’s Donna Ford-Clarke reflect on findings from our recent research on England’s occupational standards – of which there are now more than double the number in countries like Germany and Switzerland.

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7 November 2025

No train no gain

This research, supported by Multiverse, finds that access to training is a boon for people’s pay and careers. The training dividend is greatest for those on the lower rungs of the occupational ladder, helping them go further, faster.

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7 November 2025

Spotlight on Newport: Place within a Place

Ufi VocTech Trust, in partnership with Adult Learning Wales, Newport City Council and Learning and Work Institute, have launched an innovative place-based collaboration to integrate education and skills development opportunities within the communities of East Newport.

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7 November 2025

Working class people paid more when they get training from their employer

Experts are calling on the Government to do more to get employers investing in training, as research reveals it’s a “boon for people’s pay and careers” – particularly for working class people.

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5 November 2025

Responding to the final report of the Curriculum and Assessment Review

Learning and Work Institute’s Chief Executive Stephen Evans responds to the final report of the Curriculum and Assessment Review.

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4 November 2025

Manchester City Council, BBC Studios and former Chancellor Ed Balls all celebrated at the Get the Nation Learning awards

Manchester City Council, BBC Studios Drama and Ed Balls have all picked up trophies in a striking ceremony held at the Barbican to celebrate the first-ever Get the Nation Learning Awards.

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4 November 2025

Get the Nation Learning

Our campaign for lifelong learning. Because when adults learn, our society and economy thrive.

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3 November 2025

The workforce learning slowdown? Adult Participation in Learning Survey 2025

For nearly 30 years, the Adult Participation in Learning Survey has provided a unique insight into adult learning across the UK. It adopts a deliberately broad definition of learning. Discover our findings from 2025.

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3 November 2025

Post-pandemic leap in lifelong learning appears over, as national survey finds freefalling participation rates

Experts are warning of a “workforce learning slowdown” as the long-running Adult Participation in Learning Survey records a sharp contraction in the number of adults learning nationally.

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