Policy
Government orders councils to tackle 'phantom NEETs' with new tracking tool
Published July 1, 2026
Local authorities are facing renewed pressure to account for young people who fall through the cracks of official statistics, commonly referred to as "phantom NEETs". These are individuals aged 16-18 who are not in education, employment or training yet remain unrecorded in council tracking systems, making targeted intervention impossible. The government has now issued direct orders requiring councils to implement comprehensive six-month improvement plans to close these data gaps and ensure no young person disappears from view.
A central component of this initiative is the introduction of a sophisticated risk tool designed to identify teenagers at heightened risk of dropping out before they become NEET. By analysing patterns and warning signs across education and social care datasets, the system aims to enable earlier, more proactive engagement with vulnerable young people. This represents a significant shift toward preventative approaches in youth support services, moving beyond reactive counting to genuine early intervention.
The policy change reflects growing recognition that accurate tracking is essential for effective skills and employment strategy. For lead members with responsibility for economic development and children's services, the new requirements present both operational challenges—upgrading data systems and cross-agency coordination—and opportunities to demonstrate measurable improvements in keeping young people engaged with education, training or employment pathways.
AI-Generated Summary
This article was automatically curated and summarised by AI from public sources. Links to original sources are provided where available.