POLITICSDAILY MAIL
Parents on benefits could be paid hundreds to push their jobless teenagers towards apprenticeships to defuse worklessness 'time bomb'
Parents receiving government benefits may be financially incentivized to encourage their unemployed teenagers to pursue apprenticeships as a strategy to address a looming worklessness crisis. The initiative aims to tackle youth unemployment by steering jobless teens toward vocational training.
Mentioned
Related Signal
Adjacent reporting
- Labour to expand youth work experience and training schemes
- Warnings of a fresh surge in youth unemployment as Green Party pledges to bring in a £15 per hour minimum wage for ALL ages
- McDonald's wants unemployed Gen Z to fill thousands of work experience placements
- Schools are ‘pipeline’ to joblessness for many people, says ex-Labour adviser
- Unemployed youths should be in the Army instead of being paid to do nothing, says former general
- ‘Apprenticeship penalty’ on benefits forces young people from poorer UK families to quit