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Rebuilding the village - how to help young NEET people in Scotland

by Erica Young, CAS spokesperson on Social Justice.

This article was first published in The Herald on 11 July 2026.

Alan Milburn’s recent work highlighting the plight of young people who are NEET (not in Employment, Education or Training) resonated strongly in Scotland. Many areviewing jigsaw pieces ofsupport and wondering how they fit together into a complete frame that pictures their needs.It'sunclear what goes where and manyyoung people areleft without the help that they should be able to rely on. 

Ouradvisersworkwith tremendous empathy and persistence to deliver advice that changes lives.Manyyoung peopleseekour help because they’restruggling toafford theessentials -nearly one in five(18%)advised by our networklastyearweresupported to access charitable support, mostly foodbanks.   

Lowincome can have a profound impact on the mental and physical health of young people, and on their ability to envisage andworktowardsfuture goals. We see this, for example, inyounglone parentsmaskingsignificant mental health challengeswhile raising childrenonlimitedbudgets. Or, in singleyoung men experiencing social isolation, ensnaredin a cycle of falling income and deteriorating health.   

Scotland hasuniquechallenges thatimpactyoung people trying to get a foot in the door. For example, inruralparts of the country, such as Aberdeenshire, CAB advisers report incidences of young peopleleaving educationduea lack of reliable, adequately connected public transport.   

The barriers thatyoung peopleare facing are not just practical but can include deeply rooted and less tangible problems, like low confidence and limitedsocial networks.Whatmanyyoung people havein common isstress that is perpetual andhabituated. 

For some young people in crisis, the cumulative impact ofalack of consistent and sustained investment in themhas undermined trust and reducedtheirsense of agency.Consequently, for young men likeScott, thelevel of supportrequired is multi-faceted,intensiveand long-term.  

Scottinitially attendedhis local CAB forhousingadvice, but soonopened upabouta difficult childhood that had left him strugglingwithpost-traumatic stress disorder.At twenty years old he had become homeless, sleeping inhis car.Due to hismental health,shared temporary accommodation is unsuitable.He triedshift work, but the instability of his circumstances made it impossible to sustain.Since his income is barely sufficient to keep his car running, Scott regularly visits the local foodbank, which isexacerbatinghis distressandsense of drift. 

It is often said that it takes a village to raise a child. A community of mutually trusting adults is vital if children, and by extension society, are to flourish. Re-building the village mustinvolve all levels of government,enabling strategic partnerships between national and local services.  

Strengthening community capacity, particularly by empowering locally embedded services such as CABs, is a key part of this. Our safety net must act as a springboard,providingyoung peoplewith alevel of financial security that enables them to participate sustainably andultimately tothrive. 

The pieces of the jigsaw include income stability, housing security, good mental health, skillsdevelopmentand employability.What is needed is a joined-up approach to delivery, aligning partners around shared priorities and turning ambition into coordinated action and real outcomes.