HC Deb 06 May 2004 vol 420 cc1754-6W
Mr. Simmonds

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Skills what estimate his Department has made of the number of young people who will continue in education as a result of the education maintenance allowance. [167988]

Mr. Ivan Lewis

The estimated number of young people of compulsory school leaving age expected to continue in full time education in 2004–05 is 505,000. This is out of a population of 666,000. Based on evidence from the pilot evaluation the Centre for Research in Social Policy and the Institute of Fiscal Studies an additional 72,000 young people will be participating in further education by 2006–07 as a result of the EMA.

Tim Loughton

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Skills (1) in which education authority areas pupils are able to benefit from the education maintenance allowance; and how many qualify in each; [169119]

(2) in which education authority areas pupils are not able to benefit from the education maintenance allowance; and how many would have qualified for the allowance in each; [169120]

(3) what estimate he has made of the likely take-up of education maintenance allowance and the costs. [169121]

Mr. Ivan Lewis

At present, young people are able to receive an education maintenance allowance (EMA) if they live in one of the 56 LEA pilot areas listed in table one. This table also shows for each LEA area the numbers of young people who have benefited from EMA in each area. It should be noted that different LEAs have been testing different versions of the scheme, in order to inform our decisions about the best national model.

Table one: EMA pilot areas and recipients in 2003/04
Local education authority Number of students who have received EMA in 2003/04
Barking and Dagenham 924
Barnsley 1,377
Birmingham 9,780
Bolton 2,227
Bradford 4,417
Brent 1,767
Camden 1,206
Cornwall 4,968
Coventry 1,089
Doncaster 2,492
Ealing 1,618
Gateshead 1,780
Greenwich 1,404
Hackney 1,887
Halton 1,127
Hammersmith and Fulham 853
Haringey 1,183
Hartlepool 807
Islington 1,324
Kingston upon Hull 2,025
Knowsley 1,943
Lambeth 1,603
Lancashire (East) 2,268
Leeds 4,764
Leicester 3,554
Lewisham 1,903
Lincolnshire (N.E.) 1,364
Liverpool 4,821

Table one: EMA pilot areas and recipients in 2003/04
Local education authority Number of students who have received EMA in 2003/04
Luton 1,796
Manchester 4,554
Middlesbrough 1,112
Newham 2,577
North Tyneside 1,500
Northumberland 2,632
Nottingham 2,907
Oldham 2,510
Salford 1,212
Sandwell 1,872
Sheffield 3,876
Southampton 1,285
Southwark 1,370
South Tyneside 1,604
St. Helens 1,428
Stoke on Trent 2,705
Suffolk 2,460
Sunderland 2,287
Tameside 2,117
Tower Hamlets 2,754
Wakefield 2,249
Walsall 2,473
Waltham Forest 1,140
Wandsworth 1,055
Wigan 2,453
Wirral 2,457
Wolverhampton 2,377
Worcestershire 2,960
England—total 128,197

From September 2004, the national EMA scheme will be available throughout England to all young people aged 16 at the start of the 2004/05 academic year who meet the eligibility criteria. It will also to be available to 17 and 18-year-olds in the pilot areas. Our forecast is that around 270,000 young people will take up EMA in 2004/05. By 2006 EMA will provide support to over 400,000 young people.

The Department estimates the cost of the education maintenance allowance Scheme over the next three financial years to be:

£ million
2004–05 275
2005–06 403
2006–07 476

These estimates take account of the phased roll-out to one cohort at a time and the cost of administering, promoting and evaluating the scheme.