Oldham high up NEETs league
Reporter: Richard Hooton
Date published: 07 November 2011
OLDHAM has among the highest number of young people not in education, employment or training (NEETS) in the country.
A study has suggested that young people face wildly different prospects depending on their home town, with up to one in four out of school, work or training in some areas.
And Rochdale and Oldham fare badly at fifth worst with 20 per cent classed as NEETS.
Only Grimsby, Doncaster and Warrington and Wigan were worse with almost 25 per cent and Blackpool in fourth with 20 per cent too.
But at the other end of the scale, Oxford, Aberdeen, York, Plymouth and Cambridge all had very low NEET levels of less than 10 per cent.
Time spent as a NEET can damage youngsters’ work skills, make them more likely to turn to crime, leave them facing lower wages in the future, and reduce life expectancy, according to the paper by the Work Foundation for the Private Equity Foundation.
Just under an estimated one million youngsters are considered NEET, according to official figures published in August.
Shaks Ghosh, chief executive of the Private Equity Foundation, said: “This report has highlighted the great disparity in opportunities for young people across Great Britain.”
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