Welfare takeaways - six ways the system fails young claimantspublished at 14:11 BST
The report criticises the welfare system as having "badly designed incentives that deter participation and encourage benefit passivity".
This failure, it says, plays out in six ways:
- 'Investment in benefits prioritised over employment support': Milburn estimates that in 2024/25, for every £1 spent on employment support for young people, around £25 was spent on benefits
- 'A failure to prioritise early intervention': The welfare system treats interactions with young people as administrative instead of as opportunities to make sure they're supported into work
- 'Insufficient practical help to enable young sick or disabled into work': Fitness-to-work assessments are criticised for failing to identify what barriers need to be removed to enable people to participate
- 'Support doesn't fit needs of job-seeking young sick or disabled': High caseloads for Jobcentre Plus coaches are cited as an issue, as they struggle to understand specific barriers facing claimants
- 'Incentives and process make participation less attractive for many': Claimants can be scared to risk income from benefits by seeking work, with no guarantee they'll be get the same support if a job doesn't work out
- 'Assessment process locking in permanence on benefits': The welfare system for young people is dominated by those with mental health and neurodevelopmental conditions, but these often fluctuate, which is not reflected by capability assessments














