So says Sunak. Why?
Many of us do not have the ability or aptitude to do higher level maths. It should be clear to teachers that by year 10 or 11 some pupils will never get more than a pass at GCSE. Why torture these pupils for an extra two or three years doing something they are naturally not good at? Their time would be better spent doing subjects where they have a chance of progressing.
I was OK at STEM subjects but no amount of extra tuition could have turned me into an artist, an actor, a gymnast, a poet or a rugby player. I would simply have rebelled.
Maths is not the be all and end all. Most of us can get by in even demanding jobs with no more than good levels of arithmetic, fractions, percentages, a bit of algebra, indices, plane geometry and so on. In our daily lives we do not need calculus, applied maths, statistical analysis, number theory or many other (higher) branches.
Educationalists need to break out of the belief that academic subjects are superior and that vocational ones are (always) inferior. If I want a plumber I will not call a doctor of philosophy and if I want a health check I will not call a painter and decorator. There is a place for everyone in our interconnected world.