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Iran Conflict 2026
30MAR

UK youth jobless rate hits 12-year high

3 min read
08:00UTC

The Office for National Statistics put UK youth unemployment at 14.7%, the highest since 2014, mirroring a US under-25 collapse that the New York Fed traced to before ChatGPT.

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Key takeaway

AI is hitting the young first, through entry-level jobs that are never advertised.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS), the UK's national statistics agency, reported youth unemployment at 14.7% for the 16-to-24 age group on 3 June 2026, the highest since 2014, with 22.7% of young jobseekers out of work for more than a year 1. The figure mirrors the US under-25 decline the New York Federal Reserve traced to before ChatGPT , and it points to the suppressed-hiring channel rather than the firing one.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF), the 190-member international financial body, found in a January 2026 Staff Discussion Note that entry-level roles carry higher AI exposure and that generative-AI adoption specifically suppresses junior hiring 2. US graduate data points the same way: long-term unemployment among degree-holders has risen from one in five a decade ago to nearly one in three 3. The damage shows up as hires never made at the bottom of the ladder, where no Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act filing or unemployment claim records it.

Neither the ONS nor the BLS publishes an AI-exposure breakdown, so the world's largest and sixth-largest economies are both setting youth labour policy blind to the channel doing the work. The wider UK picture is already weak: payrolled employment has fallen 210,000 year on year and vacancies have dropped to 705,000, below the pre-pandemic baseline . The youth figure names who is bearing that decline. The cost compounds over time, since a cohort shut out of the entry rungs early tends to surface years later as a mid-career skills shortage, the pattern the 1980s manufacturing-automation literature documented.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The UK's Office for National Statistics, which collects and publishes the country's official economic data, reported in June 2026 that 14.7% of young people aged 16-24 were out of work. That is the highest figure since 2014, before a 12-year period of improvement. What makes this particularly worrying is that nearly a quarter of those young jobseekers have now been out of work for more than a year. That means many are stuck without the entry-level experience employers demand before offering permanent roles, a gap that compounds over time. Separate research from the International Monetary Fund found that in regions where AI has been adopted heavily, jobs in the most AI-exposed occupations run 3.6% lower after five years than in regions where AI adoption is slower. Entry-level roles carry the highest exposure, which helps explain why young people specifically are bearing the brunt.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The ONS data does not break out AI exposure, but three structural causes are identifiable from prior research. First, software developer vacancies fell 37% since ChatGPT's launch according to Morgan Stanley, while vacancies in other roles fell 26%, a 11-percentage-point gap in the sector where UK graduates most concentrated entry-level aspirations.

Second, the degree-holder long-term unemployment rate has risen from 1 in 5 a decade ago to nearly 1 in 3 now, indicating the problem is not skill level but role availability at entry.

Third, the UK has a structural concentration in sectors with high AI exposure: financial services, legal, and business services account for a higher share of graduate-entry employment in the UK than in France or Germany, where manufacturing and skilled trades provide alternative entry pathways. When AI reduces demand in those three sectors simultaneously, UK youth face a narrower range of alternatives than their European peers .

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    If 22.7% long-term youth unemployment persists, the Resolution Foundation's model implies a cohort-level earnings scar reducing lifetime income tax receipts by an estimated 6-8% per affected worker.

  • Risk

    UK graduate-entry pathway collapse in finance and professional services has no comparable continental European absorption route, given the UK's sectoral concentration in AI-exposed white-collar industries.

First Reported In

Update #12 · Jobs report says fine, layoff report says no

Office for National Statistics· 8 Jun 2026
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