Troubled families scheme has made ‘no significant impact’ – BBC News

English: David Cameron Deutsch: David Cameron

English: David Cameron Deutsch: David Cameron (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The BBC reports that a flagship government initiative to help the most disadvantaged families in England has had no significant impact, according to analysis of the scheme.

Source: Troubled families scheme has made ‘no significant impact’ – BBC News

Cynics will conclude that ministers and bureaucrats have manipulated the data. The left will argue that the program was underfunded and the right will suggest that it’s throwing good money away.

It’s worth giving the subject some thought because in the next ten years with a Hard Brexit and advancing technology more families are going to be on the economic and social scrap heap.

Personally, I would like to see compulsory national service reintroduced, like in Israel, three years for men and two years for women. Service could include seconding to voluntary services overseas, charities and social care.

The government needs to get real about the emerging social challenges, especially following a Hard Brexit.

Thoughts?

Jobs requiring social skills, preparation expected to grow most | Pew Research Center

English: Ethnic composition of Muslim American...

English: Ethnic composition of Muslim Americans, according to the Pew Research Center study of Muslim Americans in 2007 http://pewresearch.org/assets/pdf/muslim-americans.pdf. Note that the ethnic background of “White” mainly consists of respondents from a Arab region, “Black” are mainly African Americans, while “Asian” are mainly of Pakistani or South Asian descent (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Pew Research Center reports that most growth in recent years has been in occupations that require higher levels of education, training and experience – a trend that seems likely to continue.

Source: Jobs requiring social skills, preparation expected to grow most | Pew Research Center

Loke social skills, maths skills seem particularly important but don’t look to tomorrow’s jobs to be similar to today. As a Chartered Accountant, I expect demand for specialist accountancy skills but not for lower end clerks who will be engineered out by technology.

Thoughts?