The Scotsman

Scottish and UK Government­s have no reason to boast about jobs

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There was much crowing about the latest employment statistics. The UK bragging about the highest employment rate since 1971, the Scottish Government boasting that the unemployme­nt rate was lower north of the Border.

It would be perverse to want to see falling employment and rising unemployme­nt, but as the saying goes, there are lies, damn lies and statistics.

We’ve been through the mass unemployme­nt in the 1980s and many individual­s are still paying the price and many communitie­s still bear the scars.

So superficia­lly, there’s a good story for both government­s to tell. A new economy has developed in parts to replace the old heavy industries and new methods of work have grown up, allowing some who were previously excluded to access the labour market.

But the figures also mask issues which are nothing that government­s should be boasting about.

Work no longer means job security, let alone a route out of poverty. For the shameful plight of so many – on both sides of the Border – is that they are in work yet remain in poverty, their wages being insufficie­nt to keep body and soul alive. Hence why we have the perversity of food bank use often being higher amongst those in work than without it.

Likewise, a job might no longer be for life given the pace of technologi­cal change, but for many it isn’t even full-time. Supposed “flexible” working can have benefits for some, such as students or those happy with intermitte­nt work.

But it can be catastroph­ic for many contracted workers who are unable to get enough hours to survive on. It’s also worth recalling that the strike on Clydeside a century ago was for a 40-hour week. Many now would be delighted with that, and even more so if they could live off it. So, what would historical­ly be a good news story is distorted by the modern-day reality of the supposed gig and lowwage economy.

The figures spun by both government­s ring hollow to many, and it ill serves them. It’s just another reason political statements are increasing­ly viewed with cynicism or contempt.

 ?? PICTURE: JON SAVAGE ?? 0 Food bank use is often higher among people in work than for the unemployed
PICTURE: JON SAVAGE 0 Food bank use is often higher among people in work than for the unemployed

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