Marks & Spencer is rolling out a traineeship for 1,000 young people, touted as a shot in the arm for UK skills and employment. But let's not get carried away by the press release. Behind the feel-good headlines, sources whisper this is as much about optics as opportunity. The High Street giant, battered by shifting consumer habits and supply chain pressures, needs to polish its image. Offering 1,000 places to under-25s might sound noble, but it's a drop in the ocean of youth unemployment, which sits at over 400,000.
Documents seen by this desk suggest the scheme is subsidised by taxpayer funds through the government's Kickstart programme. So while M&S slaps its name on it, we're footing part of the bill. That's not to diminish the genuine chance this gives some young people: paid work, training, a foot in the door. But let's ask the hard questions. How many of these roles will become permanent? What's the retention rate after the six-month placement? M&S declined to comment on specifics, but internal memos hint at a 'flexible workforce' model. That's corporate speak for zero-hours contracts and seasonal churn.
Critics argue this is a band-aid on a haemorrhaging labour market. The real scandal? Corporate giants like M&S pay dividends to shareholders while taking public money for training that should be core business investment. Don't get me wrong: every job created is a lifeline. But we need to look beyond the ribbon-cutting. For every 1,000 trainees, thousands more are languishing on Universal Credit, waiting for a break that never comes. M&S's move is welcome, but it's not a solution. It's a start. A start that needs to be followed by proper wages, long-term contracts, and a commitment to skills that don't just serve the bottom line. Until then, treat this as what it is: a headline designed to distract from deeper rot. Watch this space.









