Less than 1% of graduates in unpaid internships

-

Less than 1% (1,835) of UK graduates are known to be working in unpaid internships six months after leaving university, reports the Higher Education Careers Services Unit (HECSU)

At the National Association of Student Employment Services Conference in Birmingham, Charlie Ball, HECSU’s deputy director of research, provides insight to the destinations of the 2011/12 graduating cohort with new analysis of the latest Destination of Leavers of Higher Education data. He reports:

• 1,560 (0.6%) first degree graduates and 235 (0.5%) Masters graduates from 2011/12 reported that they were working as unpaid interns six months after graduation
• Two thirds of all unpaid interns are in the South East, London alone accounts for 60%
• Hardly any graduates were in unpaid internships in Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and the North East. Less than 6% of all unpaid interns worked in those regions combined.
• Industries where unpaid interns were most common included design, publishing and media, and advertising, design and PR
• Unpaid interns are more likely to be women (63%)

Charlie Ball says: “For the first time this data gives us hard evidence of the nature and extent of unpaid internship for new graduates. Ideally we would like to see this figure as low as possible with everybody who is classed as a worker paid fairly.

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

“Of course this survey is a snapshot, relying on graduates reporting that they were unpaid as an intern. It also doesn’t cover everyone who may have, at any time, worked in unpaid internships as well as those working for free as volunteers or with charitable organisations, but who often with different requirements and motivations. What’s clear is that there remain many industries that still have a job to do in terms of cleaning up their employment practices.”

Latest news

Alison Lucas & Lizzie Bentley Bowers: Why your offboarding process is as vital as onboarding

We know that beginnings shape performance and culture, so we take time to get them right. Endings are often rushed, avoided or delegated to process.

Reward gaps leave part-time and public sector staff ‘at disadvantage’

Unequal access to staff perks leaves part-time and public sector workers less recognised despite strong links between incentives and engagement.

Workplace workouts: simple ways to move more at your desk and boost health and productivity

Long periods at a desk can affect energy, concentration and physical comfort. Claire Small explains how regular movement during the working day can support wellbeing.

Government warned over youth jobs gap after King’s Speech

Ministers face calls for clearer action on youth employment as almost one million young people remain outside education, work or training.
- Advertisement -

UK ‘passes 8 million mental health sick days’ as anxiety and burnout hit younger workers

Anxiety, depression and burnout are driving millions of lost working days as employers face growing calls to improve mental health support.

Employers face growing duty of care pressures as business travel costs surge

Employers are under growing pressure to protect travelling staff as geopolitical instability, rising costs and disruption reshape business travel.

Must read

Alex Hind: Are pay rises the best way to retain talent?

What is it employees need and want more than a pay rise? Alex Hind argues that so many companies miss the mark...

Nimesh Shah: The HR secrets to getting your employees out of a March slump

"HR departments need to work in synch with their leadership team."
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you