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New Deal to City Deal: Localism and the labour market Naomi Clayton Centre for Cities 10 July 2013
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There is a clear spatial pattern to unemployment… 1 in 100 claimants in Oxford and Cambridge 1 in 10 in Hull
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The geography of jobs across the country continues to change – across UK cities… …and the gap is likely to widen as the economy moves towards a high skill, service based economy
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Geography matters Typically people only travel a short distance to work (45mins) People working in low skill, low wage jobs tend to travel even less People living and working in the same local authority area
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Individuals’ access to work is affected by a range of factors…
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Planning and transport impact on individuals’ access to work Geography of high and low skilled jobs in Sheffield City Region, 2010
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The Work Programme: fewer job outcomes in weaker city economies Reluctance to make referrals to specialist support (cost) Communication between JCP and WP providers is vital
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From New Deal to City Deal New Deal (1997-2011): “key design parameters were nationally determined and local flexibilities were conceded only at the level of programme delivery, not design” Flexible New Deal (2009-2011): 28 JCP districts in GB, managing the entire customer journey; adequate and useful support, intensive support; success dependent on past partnership experience, communication and flow of information; narrow choice of services on offer City Strategies (2008-11): working across policy domains, creating single points of access, mapping service provision, implementing local wraparound services City Deals (2012 - ): bespoke deals reflecting the needs of different places, focus on youth unemployment (localised youth contracts, apprenticeships and skills), piloting innovative, new approaches (Manchester), realising savings
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City Deals and beyond… City Deals and Heseltine represent a step in the right direction Work together across policy domains (national and local) Maintain focus on sustainable jobs and progression – and pilot new approaches Manage expectations from the outset and ensure initiatives are sufficient in length Embed evaluation and track individuals – and share best practice Learn from international examples of best practice (e.g. Germany - schools and job centres; Canada - Labour Market Agreements)
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Naomi Clayton Centre for Cities 10 July 2013 n.clayton@centreforcities.org @Naomi_Cities
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