Problems for one in three unemployed adults who want to work
The January 2026 labour market statistics, released by the Office for National Statistics, show that one in three unemployed adults aged between 16–64 want to work (35.7%).
The latest figures also show that while vacancies are stable at 734,000, there are 85,000 fewer vacancies than before the pandemic and redundancies are increasing in some sectors.
Responding to the publication, Lancaster University’s Work Foundation has highlighted that there are 561,000 unemployed people aged 18–24 (13.7%), up on the quarter and on the year, and that economic inactivity is steady at 20.8% (nine million people) but nearly a quarter of those people (23%) say they want to work.
The main problem is, it goes on, that weak vacancy levels and fragile employer confidence mean jobseekers are facing an increasingly competitive labour market with signs that unemployment may not yet have peaked.
Work Foundation Director, Ben Harrison, said: “For those actively looking for work, young jobseekers and people in London — where figures indicate the unemployment rate has climbed to 7.2% — are facing the biggest challenges. As a key bellwether for the national economy, this is bad news for jobseekers in the capital and risks being replicated elsewhere without intervention.”
With more people chasing fewer jobs, finding work is becoming harder, he concluded, especially for those out of work for longer periods or at the start of their career.