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Despite repeated calls for action from the sector, it reveals the ongoing persistent funding shortfalls and their impact on young people and local communities. For over a decade, local authority budgets for youth services have been significantly depleted, with YMCA’s annual reports charting the deep and continuing cuts on youth services and the impact of this on young people. From much-needed services for young people disappearing, youth centres closing, and trained youth workers lost to the sector to the ongoing cost-of-living crisis and the financial strain on councils, youth services have been pushed to breaking point.
Instead of the much-needed reinvestment, YMCA’s latest report has revealed a stagnated 73% decline in funding for England (0.5% fall year-on-year), and a 6% year-on-year decline in Wales. This represents a real-terms cut of £1.2bn to youth services between 2010-11 to 2023-24 in England, and £16.6m in Wales.
Key findings of the report reveal:
Denise Hatton, Chief Executive of YMCA England & Wales, urged immediate and sustainable funding to rebuild the sector. She commented:
“Our latest report paints a stark picture of the ongoing crisis in youth services. Local authorities have navigated unimaginable challenges over the past decade, but there is simply nothing left to cut. Without long-term, sustainable investment in youth workers and community programmes, the next generation of young people risk losing access to the support and opportunities they need to thrive.”
A point of hope on the horizon is the Government’s commitment to a national youth strategy and ongoing policy work in 2025, which presents a vital opportunity to reset and rebuild. But promises alone are not enough –as a leading youth charity continually campaigning for long-term investment in youth services, YMCA calls for bold action in order to create lasting change. “This is a once-in-a-generation moment to reshape the future for young people, and we cannot afford to waste it,” added Denise Hatton.
The report acknowledges the importance of initiatives like the Youth Investment Fund, the Better Youth Spaces programme, and Wales’ Strategic Voluntary Youth Work Organisation (SVYWO) grant scheme. However, it highlights that these funds often prioritise capital investments over local revenue needs, leaving many frontline services struggling to survive.
The report calls for:
YMCA urges policymakers, local councils, and partners to seize this critical opportunity and invest in young people’s futures and pull funding back from the brink before it’s too late.