HC Deb 30 January 2002 vol 379 cc405-6W
Chris Ruane

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Skills how many 19-year-olds there are without a basic qualification, broken down by region, expressed as(a) a percentage and (b) total number, ranked in descending order according to percentages for the latest date for which figures are available. [30592]

Mr. Ivan Lewis

The information readily available has been derived from the Labour Force Survey and is given in the table.

Estimates of the numbers and proportions of 19-year-olds1with no qualifications by region, 2000–01, United Kingdom
Population aged 19 (Thousand) Numbers with no qualifications (Thousand) Proportion with no qualifications2(Percentage)
United Kingdom 726 61 8
Home countries
Northern Ireland 23 2 9
Wales 43 4 9
England 605 49 8
Scotland 54 4 7
Government office regions
East Midlands 55 6 10
West Midlands 61 6 10
East 63 6 9
Yorkshire and the Humber 61 5 8
London 93 7 7
North West 74 5 7
South East 101 7 7
North East 38 2 6
South West 59 3 6

Notes:

1. Due to small sample sizes, the proportion of 19 to 21-year-olds with no qualifications have been used as a proxy for 19-year-olds without qualifications.

2. Estimates of the proportion with no qualifications are subject to sampling error. Figures are accurate to:

±1 percentage point for UK and England estimates (eg estimate for England lies between 7 per cent. and 9 per cent.),

± 2 percentage points for Yorkshire, London, North West, South East, South West and Scotland estimates,

± 3 percentage points for East Midlands, West Midlands, East of England, North East and Wales estimates, and

± 4 percentage points for the Northern Ireland estimate (eg the proportion lies between 5 per cent. and 13 per cent.)

Source:

DfES estimates from the Labour Force Survey, averaged data—winter 2000–01 to autumn 2001