Home About Us Feedback Download
     Advanced Search  
March 12, 2010
 India
National
Politics
Business
Sports
Sci-Tech
Entertainment
Travel
Health
Religion
Art - Culture
Diaspora
Education
 International
Pakistan
Rest of South Asia
Asia
Americas
Europe
Australasia
Gulf-Middle East
Africa
World
 Business:
 ASIA | US | EUROPE
 updated 1330 IST
 NIKKEI -2 11488 
 HANG SENG +51 13846 
 NEC -9 4164 
  Home » Europe   E-mail this to a friend   Printable version
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
One in 10 Brit teens branded 'Neet'
11/20/2009 4:37:00 PM

London, Nov 20 (ANI): One in 10 British teenagers is unemployed and not in education, according to latest official figures.

The Government has a target to reduce the proportion of young people not in education, employment or training (Neet) to 7.
6 percent by next year.

But the latest annual data from the end of 2008 puts the figure at 10.3 percent, caused by a large increase in the number of Neet 18-year-olds, the Department for Children Schools and families said.

The percentage of 16 to 18-year-olds who fall into the same bracket has remained higher in the past year than in the previous 12 months.

This means 261,000 young people had no job and were not studying. The figure rose to 1,082,000 among 16 to 24-year-olds.

The data shows that the number of Neet 16 to 24-year-olds in the third quarter of 2009 was higher than at any time since 2005, accounting for nearly a fifth (18 percent) of the age group.

It is a damning indictment of the Government's failure to help young people during the recession, the Telegraph quoted David Willetts, the shadow skills secretary, as saying.

He added: Despite all Gordon Brown's guarantees and pledges, the number of young people neither earning nor learning is increasing at a rate of more than 9,000 a week. Ministers must stop making empty gestures that do so little to help young people.

Iain Wright, the Schools Minister, said: We are giving all 16 and 17-year-olds the opportunity to stay in education or training so they can gain the skills they need to succeed in an increasingly competitive labour market.

We must not repeat the mistakes that were made in recessions of the past and abandon a whole generation of young people. We recognise that we need to carry on helping young people through this tough economic climate. (ANI)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    E-mail this to a friend   Printable version
Top News
  Shilpa Shetty to launch new club ...
  Scoreboard: Kolkata Knight Riders ...
  Need to spread stroke awareness, ...
  Man dies after falling into sewer ...
  Jai Bhagwan in quarterfinals of C ...
  Knight Riders beat Deccan Charger ...
  Harman, Kareena named worst actor ...
  Maharashtra to build 200,000 rent ...
  Bosch lifts lockout following tru ...
  Why Sobers likes Sewhag?
 
World News
  Five blasts shake Lahore after tw ...
  Five successive blasts rip throug ...
  Fourth blast hits Lahore market
  Third blast rips a market in Laho ...
  Follow laws or face consequences, ...
  Sarkozy dusts off rumours of marr ...
  India expresses concern over opi ...
  Robbie Williams offers Mark Owen ...
  British Airways cabin crews to be ...
  Manmohan Singh to get World State ...
 
Advertisement 


South Asian Videos
Bollywood On Demand
India On Demand
Tollywood On Demand
Kollywood On Demand
Hollywood Videos
India User Videos
Realtors India
Indian Friends
Indian Short Films
Post Classifieds
Bollywood Pictures
Hindi Lyrics
Hindi Songs
Bollywood Photos
Indian Videos
India Greetings
Play Games Online
Indian Recipes
National|Politics|Business|Sports|Sci-Tech|Entertainment|Travel|Health|Religion|Art - Culture|Diaspora|Education|
Pakistan|Rest of South Asia|Asia|Americas|Europe|Australasia|Gulf-Middle East|Africa|World|
Help | Site Map | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Publishers

©2009 southasianews.com, All Rights Reserved