What would you like to ask the Minister for Employment?

We have an exciting episode of the HR People Pod in the pipeline, where we will be taking the opportunity to interview the Minister for Employment, Alison McGovern, and we want your help!

To help shape the discussion on the episode, we want to hear from you around some of the concerns, challenges as well as optimism you have towards the government’s Get Britain Working proposals as well as the recent Keep Britain Working review. 

Below is a reminder of some of the key proposals set out within the Get Britain Working White Paper:

  • Tackling long-term sickness – ambitions to reverse the increase in economic activity caused by ill health, with long-term sickness-related economic inactivity at a near-record high
  • Youth guarantee – a pledge to provide all 18-21 year olds in England with access to an apprenticeship, training, education or help finding a job
  • Jobcentre reforms – transforming the Jobcentre system into a new ‘national jobs and careers service’, which will focus on skills and careers rather than solely monitoring and managing benefits claims

Related links:

The Keep Britain Working review subsequently calls for urgent collaboration between government and businesses. The document suggested the inactivity crisis is “unlikely” to be resolved by the Government efforts alone, emphasising that employers have a “key role to play in creating inclusive workplaces that protect mental and physical health and support the retention and rehabilitation of employees, including disabled people and people with health conditions”.

Related links:

Thank you and look forward to seeing your thoughts, questions and comments below.

Parents
  • Seeing as there's been a dearth of responses so far:

    Does the Minister recognise the assertion that UK businesses have been under-investing in management upskilling across the entire workforce for several decades and that the country's historically high long-term absence rate might be connected to a generation of managers who are paid to do a job for which they are essentially unqualified?
Reply
  • Seeing as there's been a dearth of responses so far:

    Does the Minister recognise the assertion that UK businesses have been under-investing in management upskilling across the entire workforce for several decades and that the country's historically high long-term absence rate might be connected to a generation of managers who are paid to do a job for which they are essentially unqualified?
Children