The government is casting its net across the North Sea. UK ministers have been studying the Dutch youth employment model, a system hailed for its 'no dead ends' approach that keeps young people in work or education. On the face of it, the policy looks like a shimmering catch. But as a veteran of the City, I smell the familiar stench of fiscal overreach masked as social progress.
The Dutch model operates on a simple premise: every young person must be in a job, training, or education. If they fall out, local authorities step in within weeks. The result? Youth unemployment in the Netherlands hovers around 8%, half the UK rate. Impressive, I grant you. But let's not confuse correlation with causation. The Dutch economy is a different beast: a highly export-oriented, low-debt nation with a corporatist tradition that blends hands-off markets with targeted intervention. Transplanting that to the UK, with its bloated public sector and structural deficits, is like trying to graft a tulip onto an oak.
The Treasury, no doubt, is already reaching for its calculator. The cost of such a system is non-trivial. Local councils, already stretched thin, would need new mandates and funding. And where does that money come from? Higher borrowing, more quantitative easing, or as the Chancellor prefers, stealth taxes on business. The bond market is watching. Gilt yields have already crept up as the market prices in a higher supply of debt. If this policy adds another few billion to the annual budget, expect a buyers' strike. The capital flight we've seen from UK gilts in recent months is a warning shot.
Then there's the efficiency question. The Dutch system relies on close coordination between employers, schools, and welfare agencies. In the UK, we have a habit of creating bureaucratic cliffs. Remember the New Deal and Future Jobs Fund? Both launched with fanfare, both quietly disbanded after cost overruns and poor results. The 'no dead ends' policy sounds noble, but the devil is in the implementation. The UK labour market is more flexible than the Netherlands, but also more fragmented. A one-size-fits-all approach could create perverse incentives: employers might offer training that doesn't lead to real jobs, simply to tick a box. Or local councils could warehouse young people in low-quality apprenticeships to meet targets.
I am not saying we should ignore the problem. Youth unemployment is a blight, and the social costs are real. But the solution must be market-friendly. Instead of a top-down Dutch transplant, why not focus on reducing the cost of hiring young workers? Cut employer National Insurance for under-25s. Abolish the minimum wage for apprentices. Create tax-free savings accounts for training. These are targeted, cost-effective measures that don't require a sprawling bureaucracy. The market will then allocate resources efficiently, as it always does.
The ministers studying this policy should beware the allure of foreign models. The Dutch tulip looks pretty, but it may not survive the British winter. The bottom line for the UK is simple: we need to reduce youth unemployment without increasing the debt burden or distorting the labour market. Anything less is a dead end for the taxpayer.
Let the markets speak. They will reward fiscal discipline and punish profligacy. The 'no dead ends' policy, as currently conceived, sounds like a dead end for public finances. I advise the Treasury to proceed with extreme caution. The gilt market is listening.








