Index  ›  education  ›  City PM
education · City PM ↗

Grads

City PM Published Jun 8, 2026 Reviewed Jun 30, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
57 % of graduates are in full‑time work within 15 months of leaving university.
57 % · graduates in full‑time work
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
30 % of graduates are now awarded a first‑class degree.
30 % · graduates awarded a first‑class degree
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
13 % of graduates were awarded a first‑class degree two decades ago.
13 % · graduates awarded a first‑class degree
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Jumpstart’s acceptance rate is less than 1 %.
less than 1 % · acceptance rate
Jumpstart, jobs platform
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
One in ten (10 %) students set to finish university this summer plan to seek work abroad.
10 % · students planning to work abroad
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
A new report by Policy Exchange states that for nearly half of all university courses, those in the bottom quarter of the cohort earn less than minimum wage five years after graduating.
about 0.5 · all university courses0.25 · cohort5 years · on from graduating
Policy Exchange, think tank
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
A report by Policy Exchange reveals that only 57 per cent of graduates are in full-time work within 15 months of leaving university.
57 · graduates in full-time work
Policy Exchange, think tank
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Jumpstart, a jobs platform, told City PM in February that it receives around 1,000 CVs each month.
about 1000 CVs · received
Jumpstart, jobs platform
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Jumpstart, a jobs platform, told City PM in February that it has a less than one per cent acceptance rate.
less than 1 · acceptance rate
Jumpstart, jobs platform
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Tony Blair famously called for half of Britain’s school leavers to go to university.
0.5 · Britain’s school leavers to go to university
Tony Blair
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Lord Glasman stated that the report exposes the complete disaster of the last three decades of university policy.
3 decades · university policy
Lord Glasman, founder of the influential ‘Blue Labour’ pressure group
View source ↗

For nearly half of all university courses, those in the bottom quarter of the cohort end up earning less than minimum wage five years on from graduating, according to a new report on the outcomes crisis in higher education. 

The think tank Policy Exchange has found that rampant grade inflation and an explosion in university admissions have led to young people looking at grim career prospects despite being saddled with tens of thousands of pounds of debt. 

Graduates in sociology, as well as creative and performing arts degrees, are faced with the bleakest job prospects. 

Report authors have called for dramatically fewer university places to be offered, alongside a freeze on fees and scrapping the real interest rate on loans. 

Elsewhere, Policy Exchange has pushed for caps on the number of top grades that universities can dish out, alongside tougher new entry standards for school leavers vying for places.  

Laura Trott, the shadow education secretary, has backed the report, slamming a higher education establishment which leaves grads with “large debts, limited teaching time and poor employment prospects”. 

The Tory frontbencher added that the sector has become “unfair and demoralising” for young people struggling to find work, having previously critiqued the “shoddy deal” faced for students in the UK.

The report comes at a torrid time for university leavers, with fresh revelations that only 57 per cent of graduates are in full-time work within 15 months of leaving university

Despite 30 per cent of graduates now being awarded a first class degreeup from 13 per cent two decades ago – thousands of applicants are now scrapping for vanishingly few graduate jobs in a turbulent market. 

Jumpstart, a jobs platform which connects young talent to start ups, told City PM back in February that it receives around 1,000 CVs each month and has a less than one per cent acceptance rate

One in ten students set to finish university this summer are set to flee the UK’s job market to look for opportunities abroad.

Tony Blair famously called for half of Britain’s school leavers to go to university, in a now infamous pledge that has reorientated higher education into a highly commercialised sector with dubious outcomes for graduates. 

Lord Glasman, the founder of the influential ‘Blue Labour’ pressure group, said that the report “exposes the complete disaster of the last three decades of university policy”. 

“Mass expansion and marketisation have seen numbers soar, standards collapse and the proportion of Firsts go through the roof – while the construction and manufacturing industries have been starved of the skilled labour our country really needs.”

Baroness Deech, who used to run St Anne’s College Oxford, criticised the “marketisation” and “uncontrolled expansion” of the university sector, with students nudged towards seeing themselves as “consumers”. 

This article was originally published by City PM ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error