Jobs for the future: The path back to full employment in the UK
Published date: 14 Sep 2011
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A higher employment rate would in the long-term ease some of the problems faced by successive governments in the UK. It would mean higher taxes and lower welfare payments, simultaneously making balancing the budget easier and ensuring sufficient funds are available for universal services such as health and education.
However the path back to full employment will not be an easy one. Evidence suggests that the public sector has been filling in for insufficient private sector job creation over the last 20 years. One certainty in the next few years is that public sector employment will fall, so if private sector employment does not increase rapidly, the economic recovery is likely to be weak or not ‘jobs rich’. As it stands, the Coalition government’s plans for growth and job creation will be insufficient to meet the combined challenges of high unemployment and growing labour supply over the next few years..
This report's recommendations focus on promoting growth in employment and limiting the expansion of long-term unemployment.
Our people
Kayte Lawton, Senior Research Fellow
Clare McNeil, Senior Research Fellow

Tony Dolphin, Senior Economist and Associate Director for Economic Policy
In the news
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The Scotsman - 18 Sep 2011

Jobless total soars
Daily Mirror - 15 Sep 2011
Unemployment up again in public sector squeeze
Daily Mail - 14 Sep 2011
To solve unemployment, work must pay
Guardian Comment is Free - 14 Sep 2011
Enterprise zones and tax cuts not enough, think tank tells SNP
The Scotsman - 14 Sep 2011
Public jobs warning
The Scottish Sun - 14 Sep 2011
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