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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Getting people back into work is key challenge for North East

North East mayor Kim McGuinness has outlined a £50m package that aims to get at least 13,500 people back into work

A jobcentre(Image: PA)

The North East economy has for many years been defined by the issue of unemployment, with the region often at the wrong end of national league tables for people out of work.

But recent months have seen many observers not looking solely at the region’s unemployment figures (which the most recent data has at 5.6% of the adult workforce, or 71,000 people.) Attention is also being paid to the ‘economically inactive’, a much larger figure which currently stands at 24.4%, more than 400,000 people.

Some of those people are economically inactive through choice, having retired early or having stepped out of the workplace for family or other caring responsibilities. But a growing number are in that classification due to long-term sickness, both physical and mental, or people with caring responsibilities who would like to combine that with some work but are unable to do so.

Getting more of those people into the labour force has been a key demand of the business community for a number of years and resulted in Labour making an election commitment to bring the number of people in work from 75% to 80% of the working population. This week saw the Government expand on that pledge with plans to expand support for people who are out of work due to ill health in a bid to get more into employment.

With data showing that the top reasons for ill health-related economic inactivity are mental illness and musculoskeletal disorders such as back pain, Ministers have provided extra support to drive down waiting lists in the 20 NHS trusts with the highest levels of economic inactivity.

Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall also said the Government would devolve “new funding, new powers and new responsibilities to tackle economic inactivity to mayors and local areas”, with £125m in eight areas across England and Wales “to mobilise local work, health and skills support, so everyone who wants to work can get the joined-up support they need”.

North East Mayor Kim McGuinness at the Chronicle and Journal office in Newcastle.(Image: Iain Buist/Newcastle Chronicle)

The pledge was welcomed by North East mayor Kim McGuinness, who has now outlined a £50m project to break the cycle of joblessness that aims to help thousands of North East people with disabilities and health conditions get into work. Regional leaders have signed off plans to launch a new Connect to Work programme, aimed at supporting at least 13,500 people to get a job over the next three to four years - and to stay in employment.

The Connect to Work project, first announced earlier this month as part of a package of measures to reduce child poverty, was formally backed by the North East Combined Authority’s (NECA) cabinet in Morpeth on Tuesday. It will work with employers and healthcare services to offer faster and more tailored one-to-one support for people with disabilities, physical or mental health issues, and other multiple and complex barriers to sustained employment.