Sunday, February 12, 2012
Towns where 1 in 4 young people are 'Neets'
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Doncaster, Grimsby and Warrington named in the first study to map clusters under 25 who are not in work, education or training
Nearly a quarter of 16 to 24 years are not in work, education or training (NEET) in some English cities -. And it is likely to increase in coming years
in Grimsby, Doncaster and Warrington, nearly one in four children under 25 are NEET, according to a joint report by the Work Foundation, a think tank job market, and private charity Equity Foundation.
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In some cities, including Oxford, Aberdeen and York, the proportion of NEET aged 16 to 24 is less than one in 10 - well below the national average of 15.6%
Latest figures show that the number of NEET in this age group reached a high record year after year at the end of last year in England 938,000 young people under 25 were NEET, the quarterly statistics from October to December of last year's show. - The study is the first to map the towns and cities in England, Scotland and Wales, where the NEET groups under 25 are located. The researchers focused on 53 villages and towns. They found that the black spots tend to be NEET in the North of England, in areas with a history of industrial decline is largely dependent on public sector employment. In addition to Birmingham, these towns were on the outskirts of large cities, has had relatively unskilled and citizens have worked to attract private sector companies.
- academic has warned that in some areas, it became a "sense of no future" and that reductions in the coalition were "useless sacrifice" youth. Although in Grimsby, Doncaster and Warrington, one in four children under 25 are NEET, northeast of London, are fifth. In Blackpool, Rochdale, Oldham, Wirral and Ellesmere Port, nearly a fifth of the 16 - to 24 years can be classified as NEET. The same is true in Birmingham, Newcastle, Barnsley, Swansea and parts of east London. However, at Oxford, Aberdeen, Cambridge and Plymouth, fewer than one in 10 are in school and unemployed. On average, in England, 15.6% from 16 to 24 years attend school and unemployed
unemployment Aa young
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