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BackNext boss Lord Wolfson warns of youth unemployment crisis
Next boss Lord Wolfson warns of youth unemployment crisis
En desarrollo
BBC Business25.05.2026Business4 dk okuma

Next boss Lord Wolfson warns of youth unemployment crisis

En resumen

  • Lord Wolfson, CEO of Next, highlighted a surge in job applicants, signaling a youth unemployment crisis.
  • He urged the government to cut employer taxes and minimum wage hikes, advocating for economic growth as the primary solution.

Resumen generado por IA

Por qué importa

Next CEO Lord Wolfson has expressed concerns about rising youth unemployment, citing a doubling of applicants for shop jobs. He argues that government policies, including National Insurance hikes and minimum wage increases, are contributing to the problem.

Tamaño de fuente

Lord Wolfson told the BBC that just two years ago, Next typically received 10 applicants for every job in its shops, but that number had since risen to 19.

"That doubling of applicants for shop jobs is indicative of just how big the crisis is in youth unemployment at the moment," he said.

Conservative peer Lord Wolfson also called on the government to reverse its hike in the rate employers have to pay in National Insurance, along with minimum wage rises. But he said economic growth was the main solution to boosting the jobs market.

"Youth unemployment is really a symptom of wider problems with employment in the economy, and of course, if you've got fewer jobs, the people who suffer most are the people with the least experience and that is the youngest," the chief executive said.

"Cutting wages for the lowest paid during a time of global uncertainty is not the answer," the spokesperson said, adding a £2.5bn youth employment support package would "deliver a million opportunities across the country".

A Department for Business and Trade spokesperson, who pointed out the Next boss was paid £7m last year, said the government's Budget has allowed it to stabilise the economy and deliver support for families and businesses.

There are growing concerns over the number of young people not working. Latest figures show the unemployment rate for 16 to 24-year-olds is 16.2%, the highest since last 2014, and more than three times the rate of general unemployment at 5%.

High street retailers and hospitality businesses such as restaurants, cafes and pubs often offer the first experience of work for many young people, especially those still at school and in further education.

But businesses including Next have warned that an increase in taxes for employers and higher minimum wages were affecting their ability to create roles, particularly lower paid, part-time jobs. Sluggish economic growth can also have an impact on hiring, as businesses tend to hold off investment.

Lord Wolfson said, as a result of cost increases, Next had fewer staff in individual shops, but its online business was thriving. He previously said government policies had seen Next's wage bill rise by £70m per year.

He added the retailer was increasingly using automation and other technology, such as self-scanning lockers for customers to return items instead of having staff on tills.

Next is seen as a high street success story and a business that has evolved and adapted while its rivals from years gone by have gone to the wall.

It has hoovered up brands including Joules, Fatface, Cath Kidson, and Made.com that have struggled in recent years, and employs more than 30,000 people across its businesses. Earlier this month, the retailer increased its full-year profit expectations to £1.2bn, with sales up 6.2% in the first quarter.

"When people talk about a company making a billion pounds, they assume that that's somehow a person with a billion pounds in their pocket and they must be very, very rich. But the nature of public companies is that we are owned by hundreds of thousands of savers whose savings are often very modest," he said.

Lord Wolfson insisted Next had to make a profit. "If you look at retail over the last 25 years... 70 to 80% of the names that were there then have gone. And what you can't do is say, we just won't run the business for profit because if you don't run the business for profit, you just don't stay in business," he said.

He also repeated his criticisms of the government's Employment Rights Act, warning one aspect of the legislation meant it was "going to get much harder" for Next to offer more hours for its staff.

Lord Wolfson said he agreed with eliminating zero-hours contracts in most sectors, but said the new rules were tricky for retail, "because the risk is you then have to contract for those hours forever".

"You can't afford to... have the same number of people in your shop in February as you have in and around Christmas," the Conservative peer said.

"That's going to be bad news for our colleagues who want extra hours, particularly students who, in holiday time, need extra hours, and of course bad news for customers because service won't be as good."

However the Trades Union Congress said the policy was "hugely popular" and the right to a regular-hours contract "is set to be based on a reference period over several months which will even out peaks and troughs", and would not impact holiday jobs.

"All of these things are holding the economy back and if government could just take its foot off the brakes, we could have a much, much faster growing economy," he added.

Qué observar

Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos

  • Next will continue to increase its use of automation and technology.

    Muy probable · Medio plazo

  • The government will face continued pressure to address youth unemployment and revise economic policies.

    Probable · Medio plazo

  • Debate around zero-hours contracts and employment rights in the retail sector will persist.

    Probable · Medio plazo

Preguntas abiertas

  • What specific government policies are most detrimental to youth employment?
  • What are the long-term implications of increased automation in retail for youth employment?
  • How will the government's youth employment support package be implemented and measured?
  • What is the precise impact of the Employment Rights Act on retail staffing flexibility?

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This article was originally published by BBC Business.

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