At the launch of the “Pathways into Employment” report in
Barnsley Ms Kendall will lay the path for a new Government white
paper to get Britain working. This is central to delivering the
Government's first mission – to kickstart economic growth; making
everyone, not just a few, better off.
She will set out the dire inheritance from the last 14 years
including:
- Britain remaining the only country in the G7 whose employment
rate has still not returned to pre-pandemic levels.
- 2.8 million people out of work due to ill health or
disability
- 1 in 8 young people not in education, employment or work
- Spending on sickness and disability benefits is set to
increase by £30bn over the next five years according to the
OBR
- Too many people trapped in low paid, poor quality work, with
little prospect of improving their lot in life. Of those in low
in pay in 2006, only one-in-six escaped it a decade later.
Ms Kendall will argue:
The fundamental problem we face is that the current system of
employment support is designed to address the problems of
yesterday – not today, tomorrow and beyond.
She will say over the last 14 years the DWP has focused almost
entirely on the benefits system, and specifically on implementing
Universal Credit, and that “nowhere near enough attention has
been paid to the wider issues – like health, skills, childcare
and transport – that determine whether people get work, stay in
work and get on in work.
She will call time on the approach of the previous
government and instead seek “employment opportunity unleashed for
all” as part of the government's long-term ambition to reach
80 per cent employment, with better quality of work, and higher
earnings.
The Secretary of State will set out bold plans to tackle economic
activity by enabling local leaders to tailor schemes to get
people back into work – and to prioritise good, rewarding, well
paid work. She will say:
I can confirm today that we will empower local leaders and local
areas to tackle economic inactivity and open up economic
opportunity.
We will give local places the responsibility and resources to
design a joined-up work, health and skills offer that's right for
local people.
DWP will
support local areas to make a success of this new approach.
And we will devolve new powers over employment support to
catalyse action and change.
Setting out her vision for reform, the Work and Pensions
Secretary is also expected to say:
Over the last 14 years millions of people have been denied their
rightful chance of participating in the labour market, and the
hope of a brighter future. They've been excluded, left out,
categorised and labelled. Britain isn't working.
We need fundamental reform so the department for welfare becomes
a genuine department for work.
We'll pursue an ambitious plan alongside the government's goals
to raise productivity and living standards and to improve the
quality of work. To get Britain growing again, get Britain
building again and get Britain working again.
As part of her drive to tackle economic inactivity, the Secretary
of State will also announce a new group of external experts who
will provide labour market insight and advice to drive change
throughout the system.
The Labour Market Advisory Board, which will be chaired by Paul
Gregg - Former Director of the Centre for Analysis of Social
Policy at the University of Bath - is expected to meet quarterly
and will provide advice to the Work and Pensions Secretary and
offer insight, expertise, and challenge to the department's
plans.
The speech follows the announcement by the Work and Pensions
Secretary, that the Government will, as part of the Growth
Mission, publish a White Paper which will build on manifesto
commitments of a three-pillared approach to support people into
work:
- A new national jobs and career service to help get more
people into work, and on in their work.
- New work, health and skills plans for the economically
inactive, led by Mayors and local areas.
- A youth guarantee for all young people aged 18 to 21.
It forms part of a cross-government approach to help people into
work, including the launch of Skills England, and cutting NHS
waiting lists to build the healthy society needed for a healthy
economy.