The political dispute over the "lockdown of Corona" complicated the matter

One million young Britons face a jobs crisis in a matter of weeks

The lockdown in Manchester will eliminate tens of thousands of jobs.

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A job crisis is expected to hit about a million young Britons, within weeks, creating a new "Corona generation", struggling to find work, according to a disturbing new analysis on the potential economic effects of the epidemic.

As tensions rise between parliament and local councils due to attempts to impose more restrictions, Chancellor Rishi Sunak faces mounting pressure to provide greater support to young people trying to get their first jobs in their lives.

Research by a leading UK labor market expert, Professor of Economic and Social Policy at the University of Bath, Paul Gregg, revealed that nearly a million people, between the ages of 16 and 24, who are not in education or full-time work, will face major obstacles in Work when the Unpaid Leave Scheme ends, this month.

The new study, published on Monday, found that the end of the vacation scheme, the scarcity of new jobs, and the arrival of school leavers and university graduates to the labor market are all factors that offer young people bleak opportunities, unless more support is provided.

And he warns that the "guarantee of opportunity" that the Prime Minister (Boris Johnson) offers to young people in vocational training or integration into the labor market "falls far short of what is required."

Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham, who has resisted calls to place his district under new Level 3 restrictions, will demand that Parliament intervene to break the deadlock with districts, by creating a fair system of support for people, after employers have had to close their businesses as a result of infection control measures.

Further evidence of the growing tension within the Conservative Party emerged after it was revealed that 20 Conservative MPs in southern England had written to Labor leader Keir Starmer and Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham asking them to work with the government. He called Starmer. The government to impose a two-week lockdown.

The letter, signed by Rep. Jerome Mayhew, of Norfolk, says the national lockdown is the wrong approach, and adds that companies will close their doors and lead to job losses, in Manchester, regardless of any national or regional shutdown.

The nationwide lockdown, Mayhew said, would cause "tens of thousands of jobs to be lost in Southern Conservative constituencies," despite the fact that most of them are low-prevalence areas.

The message sparked sharp responses from his Conservative colleagues, who represent constituencies, in the Greater Manchester area.

"May I politely ask for colleagues to take care of their constituencies for themselves, and I would not like to impose tougher restrictions on their constituencies, and we are ready to work constructively to improve the situation in Greater Manchester," said Hazel Grove Rep.

"Interventions from fellow members, who do not understand the situation, are neither needed nor helpful," commented Christian Wakeford, a member of parliament for Bury South.

The government said it supported hundreds of thousands of young people to find good jobs through the "Kickstart" program, which is worth two billion pounds, and has invested millions of pounds in supporting vocational training and increasing the number of trainers at work, and continuing to help the unemployed. All ages, to return to work through the support program, to obtain new jobs.

The focus, from the start, was on supporting those in need.

The data shows that the youngest and the poorest are the most likely to benefit from the government's initial economic interventions.

This support will continue, according to the government, which is looking to revitalize the economy and rebuild the affected sectors, in a better way, and create, protect and support jobs.

Critical moment

Leading scholars in Britain have warned that disputes over Corona restrictions come at a critical moment.

A member of the government's Emergencies Scientific Advisory Group and chair of its subcommittee on modeling, Graham Medley, said the debate over the level of restrictions should have taken place over the summer.

"The danger is that this is happening now, while we are two weeks away, at the most, from the hospitals in the northwest being in the same condition that they were in at the beginning of April," he added. "It seems a bit close, because these matters must be resolved." Very quickly".

• The government says it has supported hundreds of thousands of young people to find good jobs through the "Kickstart" program.

• Research conducted by one of the UK's leading labor market experts, Professor of Economic and Social Policy at the University of Bath, Paul Gregg, revealed that nearly a million people, between the ages of 16 and 24, who are not in education or full-time work, will face major obstacles At work when the unpaid leave scheme ends, this month.


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