The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) released the interim report for the Milburn Review on Youth Unemployment yesterday. The report was an exercise in how the DWP has a compliant corporate media at its beck and call. But as always, we need to look at the parts of the report the DWP didn’t want shouted from the rooftops.
Corporate shills marching to the DWP’s beat
The corporate media, of course, had a field day yesterday getting to crow about the ‘lost generation’, especially those with mental health conditions. At one point, both the BBC and Guardian were running live rolling coverage. Yes, of an interim report into youth unemployment.
But what was missing is that the report is, in places, quite nuanced on disability. It actually acknowledges that there are many different reasons why the level of disability or poor health has increased in the last decade. This includes socioeconomic factors such as the cost of living, growing up in poverty, and lack of support.
It also mentions inadequate support in schools and that Covid had a huge part to play in both creating and exacerbating underlying conditions.
However, by only relating these factors back to how it stops kids from getting into work, Milburn ignores that disabled people deserve to be supported to have a good life regardless of whether they can work.
Milburn presents opinion as fact
Despite him actually setting out the logical reasons why disabled young people are much more likely to be unemployed, this is Alan Milburn, so he still has to blame them.
There are many examples of Milburn adding his own opinion disguised as fact, and by doing so, completely rubbishing the actual evidence provided.
After including a report on young people’s psychological distress, he says:
It confirms that what we are seeing is not simply a change in how young people talk about their mental health. It is a change in their capacity to participate. There is a difference between a generation that is more willing to name its struggles and a generation that is functionally less able to engage with education and work.
Basically, talk about it all you want, but do it at work or shut up.
Implying depression and ADHD aren’t real disabilities
What’s most interesting is that disability and health are split into separate sections. Disability is basically classed as something which does need support, and he accepts that many disabled people will never be able to work.
However, he then includes mental health and neurodivergent (which he calls neurodevelopmental) conditions in the health section. This states clearly that he thinks these aren’t real disabilities and shouldn’t be seen as an excuse not to work.
He also shows what he thinks about anxiety and depression by saying:
This explosion has primarily been in mental health issues such as anxiety and depression, rather than in serious mental illnesses
Milburn also essentially blames the rise in ADHD and diagnosis for the strain on the NHS. Coincidentally, this is also what Wes Streeting is trying (and failing) to do with his review into overdiagnosis.
After giving the evidence of why more young people (especially girls) are being diagnosed with neurodivergent conditions now, he can’t resist contradicting the evidence again:
If the rise in diagnoses were simply the correction of historic under-recognition, the response would be straightforward: more assessment capacity and more clinical treatment.
If, as the evidence increasingly suggests, the current patterns are shaped as much by the design of systems as by underlying need, including the incentives those systems create and the tendency to medicalise forms of distress that may have broader social or developmental roots, then the response must be broader.
Basically, our systems weren’t designed for you to realise you’re not the problem. But instead of solutions to make the system better, he, of course, relates it back to kids just not getting off their bums and working.
He is so close to getting it, but can’t resist:
It must include earlier, more accessible forms of support that do not depend on long waits for specialist diagnosis. And it must address the social determinants producing the distress in the first place: poverty, family instability, social media.
Critically, as there seems to have been a widening of what is recognised as disability within the system – and with it an expansion of the range of diagnoses and conditions that legitimise non-participation – the key issue is not the label itself but the functional impact. Until the health – and wider – system gets to grips with that key distinction, too many young people will be categorised as unfit to work when, with help, support and earlier intervention, they would be able to do so.
Review isn’t proving Milburns foregone conclusion
Despite all this bluster about wanting to support young disabled people into work, Access to Work is mentioned just three times in this almost 68,000-word report. Once as part of a support package, then in the annex explaining what it is and then again as a footnote.
It’s a tale as old as time, the DWP pretends to care about getting disabled people into work, but wants as little attention brought to the support they’re trying to cut as possible.
Essentially, this is exactly the same problem Wesley had with trying to prove ADHD is overdiagnosed. Despite Milburn already deciding that kids are faking disability not to work, the evidence very much says that disabled young people need support. And no amount of his snide comments and DWP-induced media hysteria will change that.
Featured image via Getty/Carl Court













The report will be a mess, as it’s shaping up to be, but so will the responses to it. The MSM obviously will be appalling. What will be untouchable is capitalism, and neoliberalism in particular. Also excluded will be any focus on work and employers, the structure and organisation of activities to support life and living, which are insufficient since most of us have bullshit jobs, or jobs related to making shig no one needs or to satisfy manufactured desires. The report will simply assume that this system of human organisation which is poisonous to all.life on earth is just peachy. The purpose of the report is intended to vilify young people. If you want to know what your parents think of you, just hear the deafening silence of their reaction when they hear about it. If you’re a young person you need to know thst your parents hate you, which is why they won’t lift a finger in revolt against the report. If anything they will pile on, all with present company excepted of course.
After nearly 16 years of austerity cuts to the NHS, community care, job training, youth centres, decent housing, wages, benefits and education you’d think that Labour wonk might get a clue about why young people, especially the disabled, are increasingly feeling hopeless and suffering from the physical and psychological effects of poverty and deprivation.
But let’s not forget that if the nobs in Labour have kids who are unwell they whisk them off to a private healthcare or bail them out financially. They also have a top education and all the right contacts.
So while Starmer and Co. bleat on about hard work, if daddy is earning £90,000 and then some they have no idea what it’s like living off baked beans and a tin of tuna because you have no money left after paying bills and rent.
Blaming individuals for systemic problems is the hallmark of a bankrupt, rightwing government. I’m referring to Labour here not the Tories to avoid confusion.
On top of this we have attacks on SEND provision meaning children will be deprived of the education they actually need to find work, all part of the wholesale destruction of social provision by the political class on behalf of the imperialist oligarchy who will have millions of young people slaughtered in another world war if we do not overthrow them. Nothing short of permanent socialist revolution will give young people the promising future they need. Worth reading this WSWS.org report. ‘The cuts to welfare are part of a broader ruling class offensive. Labour’s budget priorities are for a massive increase in military spending to fund war and rearmament, tax breaks and privatisation drives. The disabled, sick and the working class will bear the brunt of a new period of war escalation through the gutting of social services that millions rely on.
Despite efforts to normalise attacks on the disabled and those dependent on benefits by the Labour government, public opposition has forced repeated U-turns on attacking pensioners, capping child benefits and attacks on PIP. There is deeply felt hostility to targeting the most vulnerable. But Starmer and his Chancellor Rachel Reeves are proceeding with their offensive. The emergence of strikes by National Health Service staff, educators, and rail and transport workers against below inflation pay rises and privatisation, coupled with mass demonstrations against war, shows the basis for a unified and organised fightback by the working class.’ https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2026/04/06/pcvc-a06.html
As the guy who runs Next pointed out, there are nowhere near enough entry-level jobs; they simply aren’t there https://www.theguardian.com/business/2026/may/26/next-boss-entry-level-jobs-lord-wolfson-youth-unemployment
A point about the much lamented recent rise in what are being referred to endlessly as low level mental health problems (even though no such category exists, as I understand it); I refer you to the 2019 High Court ruling (RF v SSWP [2019] EWHC 2553) which meant DWP had to stop unfairly dismissing mental health claims as facetious. Awards of PIP for mental health disorders have increased since then because of that High Court ruling.
As we can see form your own reporting above ” he then includes mental health and neurodivergent (which he calls neurodevelopmental) conditions in the health section. This states clearly that he thinks these aren’t real disabilities and shouldn’t be seen as an excuse not to work.
He also shows what he thinks about anxiety and depression by saying:
This explosion has primarily been in mental health issues such as anxiety and depression, rather than in serious mental illnesses”
it’s clear the trivialisation of serious issues continues.
And just because I haven’t said it enough in the past 16 years, let’s not forget the motivation behind all such behaviour; removing state provision of social security opens up a multi-£Bn private market, plenty of gravy for everyone involved, politicians & media both. That’s all this is about; greed.