The Netherlands has achieved what Britain now desperately needs: a youth unemployment rate of 6.2%, less than half the UK’s 13.4%. This is not a statistical anomaly but the result of a systemic overhaul that began in the 1990s. The Dutch ‘school and work’ model, known as the ‘Beroepsbegeleidende Leerweg’ (BBL), combines vocational training with paid apprenticeships, ensuring that young people are not trapped in cycles of low-skilled labour or classroom-only education.
At the heart of the system is a simple principle: no dead ends. Every qualification, from a Level 2 vocational certificate to a university degree, is linked to a clear pathway for progression. Employers are central to the design. They provide placements, co-develop curricula, and receive subsidies for hiring apprentices. The result is a pipeline that delivers skilled workers to industries that need them, from healthcare and IT to renewable energy.
The contrast with Britain is stark. Here, youth unemployment has been described as a ‘ticking time bomb’. The UK has a fragmented system where vocational courses often lack employer input, and apprenticeships are frequently short-term or of low quality. The Gatsby Foundation, a charity focusing on education, recently noted that only 5% of 16-18 year olds in England participate in apprenticeships, compared to over 20% in the Netherlands. This mismatch between training and labour market needs is compounded by the UK’s lack of a coherent careers advice system.
But can the Dutch model be transplanted? The answer is yes, but with caveats. The Dutch system relies on a close partnership between government, employers, and trade unions, known as the ‘polder model’. This tripartite approach ensures that vocational programmes are responsive to economic shifts. For example, when the Dutch government identified a shortage of energy transition technicians, it worked with industry to create a specialised BBL track within months. The UK lacks such institutional mechanisms.
Cost is not the barrier. The Dutch spend approximately 0.6% of GDP on vocational education, similar to the UK’s 0.5%. The difference lies in efficiency. Dutch funding is tied to outcomes: schools receive bonuses for completing apprentices and placing them in jobs. Employers are incentivised through tax breaks and wage subsidies that reduce the cost of hiring a BBL apprentice by up to 40% in the first year.
The UK could start by replicating the ‘no dead ends’ principle. This means creating clear vocational pathways that lead to higher qualifications and better pay. The proposed ‘T-levels’ are a step in this direction, but they lack the employer engagement and progression routes of the Dutch system. Without a robust infrastructure of regional employer networks, T-levels risk becoming another course rather than a career launchpad.
Biosphere collapse adds urgency. The energy transition demands a workforce trained in solar installation, heat pump fitting, and battery technology. The Netherlands is already using its youth employment model to fill these roles. Britain, with its gridlocked skills system, may find itself importing labour for the very jobs that could provide a future for its young people.
The Dutch model is not a silver bullet. It requires cultural shifts in how vocational education is valued. But the physics of the labour market are clear: without a system that connects education to employment, young people will continue to languish in a limbo of insecure work and unfulfilled potential. Britain can ignore the data, but the cost of doing nothing is measured in wasted lives and lost productivity. The evidence is on the table. The only question is whether we have the will to implement it.









