Author
Summary
There were around 7.5 million young people aged 16 to 24 in the UK in 2012, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) mid-year population estimates. This is an important age of transition from childhood to adulthood, and the ways in which this transition is negotiated may affect current and future well-being. Arnett (2004) coined the phrase ‘emerging adulthood’ to describe this stage of life. As many have yet to make ‘the transitions historically associated with adult status’, such as marriage and parenthood, the aspects of life affecting a young person’s well-being will differ from those of the rest of the adult population, and those that are the same may differ in their impact. The framework for measuring national well-being indicators is grouped into ten domains. These domains of well-being are consistent at all ages. Most of the national well-being measures for the adult population also apply to 16 to 24 year olds. However, there are some measures which are particularly relevant for young people, such as not being in education, employment and training. Three domains – governance, natural environment and economy – are more contextual, so are not included in the young people’s measurement framework. ONS has developed a provisional set of headline measures of young people’s well-being across seven domains, alongside a set of measures for children up to the age of 15. In March 2014, ONS published a consultation on the first iteration of these measures. The consultation response was published in July 2014 and an updated set of measures will be published in 2015. This report presents a baseline for 27 of the 28 measures1 young people’s well-being. It considers how selected measures compare across age groups, change over time or differ by gender2 for young people aged 16 to 24. A similar analysis of the children’s measures was published in October 2014.