Gulf News

Employment numbers down in August

THIS IS THE FIRST TIME THIS HAS HAPPENED SINCE THE SERIES BEGAN IN AUGUST 2009

- BY BABU DAS AUGUSTINE Banking Editor

Developmen­t signals a modest average decline in jobs last month, the first time this has happened since the series began in August 2009 |

The Emirates NBD UAE Purchasing Managers’ Index, a composite indicator of operating conditions in the nonoil private sector of economy, fell to 55 in August, down from 55.8 in July.

The employment index of the PMI survey fell to 49 in August signalling a modest average decline in jobs last month, the first time this has happened since the series began in August 2009.

Slow hiring in the economy was evident as 7.5 per cent of firms surveyed indicated lower employment in August compared with July, while 3.9 per cent of firms reported increased hiring. Some firms which reported job shedding last month linked this to efficiency initiative­s.

“The softness in employment, which has been evident to some extent since 2016 but appears to have slowed even further this year, is surprising in the context of strong reported growth in output and new orders in the private sector over the same period,” said Khatija Haque, head of Mena Research at Emirates NBD.

Job growth over the last couple of years, as measured by the PMI has been modest with the employment index averaging 51.2 in both 2016 and 2017. This year has been even softer, with the employment index averaging just 50.5 year-to-date.

“This has been surprising in the context of strong reported growth in output and new orders in the private sector over the same period. Indeed, the

The softness in employment, which has been evident to some extent since 2016 but appears to have slowed even further this year, is surprising in the context of strong reported growth in output and new orders in the private sector over the same period.” Khatija Haque | Head of Mena Research at Emirates NBD

output index rose to 63.1 in August, while new work increased at a strong [although slower] rate last month, with this index easing to 57.1,” Haque said.

Despite new order growth easing in the latest survey, output growth accelerate­d and remained sharp overall.

Many firms linked higher output requiremen­ts to elevated backlogs of work and ongoing projects surroundin­g Expo 2020. Output growth has been recorded continuous­ly since February 2010.

Continuing the sequence seen since April, new export orders rose once again during August. The rate of growth was marked overall and reflected stronger inflows of new business from the GCC countries.

Stocks of pre-production inventorie­s, which accounts for 10 per cent of the headline PMI, also declined slightly in August, the first time this component has slipped under the neutral 50 level since April 2012.

On the price front, the vast majority of companies in the UAE’s non-oil private sector reported unchanged cost pressures since one month ago. Meanwhile, some firms reported price discountin­g, which was linked to promotiona­l activity.

“The August PMI survey suggests that while activity in the non-oil private sector is expanding at a similar rate to last year, margin pressures on firms mean that this growth in new work and output is not translatin­g to job creation or higher wages,” Haque said.

 ?? Source: IHS Markit, Emirates NBD Research ©Gulf News ??
Source: IHS Markit, Emirates NBD Research ©Gulf News

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