Khaleej Times

Land values fall most in 5 years

UK unemployme­nt falls to 11-year low

- Scott Hamilton

london — UK unemployme­nt fell to its lowest rate in 11 years in the third quarter but there are signs that the labour market is slowing in the wake of the Brexit vote.

The jobless rate fell to 4.8 per cent from 4.9 per cent in the second quarter, the Office for National Statistics figures on Wednesday show.

But the economy added only 49,000 workers, half the number expected and down from a 172,000-increase in the previous three months.

“Unemployme­nt is at its lowest for more than 10 years, and the employment rate remains at a record high,” ONS statistici­an David Freeman said in a statement. “Nonetheles­s, there are signs that the labour might be cooling, with employment growth slowing.”

There were also signs that rising inflation is taking its toll on living standards, as real wages grew just 1.7 per cent in the third quarter, matching the slowest rate since February 2015.

A cooling jobs market and rising prices threaten to undermine consumer LONDON — Land values in central London’s best districts fell 10.3 per cent in the year through September, the biggest fall in at least five years, as higher taxes and the Brexit vote cause luxury home prices to fall.

Banks are less willing to lend for site acquisitio­ns and constructi­on, fueling the decline in values, broker Knight Frank said in a report. Developers also need to raise their profit margins as a buffer against any further falls in home prices, the broker said. spending, which has driven almost four years of economic expansion. Uncertaint­y as Britain negotiates its split from the European Union is expected to hit hiring and investment, making it hard for workers to negotiate significan­t pay increases.

Unemployme­nt fell by 37,000 to 1.6 million as the economy registered little increase in the economical­ly active workforce. Jobless claims — a narrower measure of unemployme­nt — increased for a third month in October. They gained 9,800, the biggest rise since May, following an upwardly revised 5,600 increase in September.

“[Wednesday’s] figures confirmed the indication­s from the surveys that the Leave vote is starting to sap the jobs recovery of its previous strength,” said Ruth Gregory, an economist at Capital Economics in London.

“The weakening in the employment surveys suggest that employment growth will probably slow further. This moderation should prevent wage growth from picking up in coming months.”

Average-earnings growth stayed at 2.3 per cent in the three months through September, though the rate excluding bonuses picked to 2.4 per cent from 2.3 per cent.

The pressure on real wages is expected to intensify, with some economists predicting inflation could reach almost four per cent next year as the 12 per cent fall in the pound since the Brexit vote drives up import costs.

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