The Department for Work and Pensions will today release statistics on the Work Programme; a government initiative aimed at getting the unemployed back into work. After a difficult start in a tough economic climate, the scheme now seems to be performing well. However, with an election approaching and current work Work Programme contracts running out in 2016, the next stage of reform is on the agenda. Will Tanner provides ideas on the future of employment support and writes that future reform must start with the payment and performance model
Reform’s Will Tanner argues that we need to look more critically at the employment culture of the pu...
This report calls for a wide-ranging overhaul of income support, housing and employment services to ...
Qualitative research into the impact of welfare reforms have found that they led to an erosion of re...
Since the 1970s, the governance of labour market policies in the UK has been characterised by New Pu...
Will the government’s new Help to Work scheme, recently launched, actually help people back into wor...
In 2006, the Howard government’s Welfare to Work reforms placed new eligibility requirements ...
Responding to seemingly intractable levels of long-term unemployment and more recently arising from ...
Active labour market policy measures have grown in popularity once more. At a time of global economi...
"This Paper sets out the Government’s strategy for extending employment opportunity to all those who...
Welfare to Work was one of the Labour Party's flagship policies during the run-up to the 1997 electi...
Responding to seemingly intractable levels of long-term unemployment and more recently arising from ...
The UK has been a high profile policy innovator in welfare-to-work provision which has led in the Co...
This paper highlights the degree of flexibility and personalisation in the UK’s welfare to work prog...
The Blair government of Great Britain has been taking action to help young unemployed people under t...
This paper examines the impact of the Working Families Tax Credit (WFTC) on employment retention and...
Reform’s Will Tanner argues that we need to look more critically at the employment culture of the pu...
This report calls for a wide-ranging overhaul of income support, housing and employment services to ...
Qualitative research into the impact of welfare reforms have found that they led to an erosion of re...
Since the 1970s, the governance of labour market policies in the UK has been characterised by New Pu...
Will the government’s new Help to Work scheme, recently launched, actually help people back into wor...
In 2006, the Howard government’s Welfare to Work reforms placed new eligibility requirements ...
Responding to seemingly intractable levels of long-term unemployment and more recently arising from ...
Active labour market policy measures have grown in popularity once more. At a time of global economi...
"This Paper sets out the Government’s strategy for extending employment opportunity to all those who...
Welfare to Work was one of the Labour Party's flagship policies during the run-up to the 1997 electi...
Responding to seemingly intractable levels of long-term unemployment and more recently arising from ...
The UK has been a high profile policy innovator in welfare-to-work provision which has led in the Co...
This paper highlights the degree of flexibility and personalisation in the UK’s welfare to work prog...
The Blair government of Great Britain has been taking action to help young unemployed people under t...
This paper examines the impact of the Working Families Tax Credit (WFTC) on employment retention and...
Reform’s Will Tanner argues that we need to look more critically at the employment culture of the pu...
This report calls for a wide-ranging overhaul of income support, housing and employment services to ...
Qualitative research into the impact of welfare reforms have found that they led to an erosion of re...