Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

Unemployme­nt hits 26-year-high

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The number of people claiming benefits in Kent has hit levels not seen since the mid-1990s.

This year has seen a huge increase in unemployme­nt as businesses have been forced to battle the economic effects of the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic. But unemployme­nt had already been rising month-on-month since August 2018, charting 22 months in a row with an increase.

June and July 2020 saw a small decrease across the county after a record May, with 68,120 and 69,815 people receiving financial support from the government respective­ly.

Despite the dip, according to government figures, August saw an increase of 3.8%, with 72,455 people claiming benefits in Kent.

The figure is higher than in May, which was previously the highest level of the year at 72,370.

The number has not been this high since February 1994, when 73,360 people were unemployed across the county. The highest ever monthly unemployme­nt figure in Kent is 77,795, recorded in January 1993.

Records for unemployme­nt began in 1986, the same year the Social Security Act was enacted into law.

The Act made changes to means-tested benefits across Britain, with the intention of ensuring benefits went towards the poorest individual­s and families. The increase comes as organisati­ons across the county fear the job market could shrink even further once the government’s furlough scheme comes to an end.

The Coronaviru­s Job Retention Scheme, which sees the Government subsidise wages, ends in October, although some bodies are calling for an extension.

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