The Scotsman

Part-time staff ‘will suffer more job losses’

- By EMMA NEWLANDS

Part-time workers will suffer more job losses proportion­ately when furlough ends, according to a report that is calling for the employment recovery to be “inclusive”.

Part-time workers will suffer more job losses proportion­ately when furlough ends, according to a report that is calling for the employment recovery to be “inclusive”.

Social enterprise Timewise has commission­ed the Institute for Employment Studies (IES) to analyse what has happened to part-time workers during the pandemic.

It found 44 per cent of parttimers who were “away from work” – effectivel­y furloughed – during the first lockdown remained so between July and September last year, but the figure for full-time employees was about a third.

The flexible working consultanc­y also said nearly one in four employees in the UK are part-time, many of whom are in frontline and low-paid jobs. It added that 80 per cent of such employees do not want to work more hours.

“For many of these people, part-time work is a necessity to being able to work at all,” Timewise said. "Whether fitting work with raising children, elder care or a sickness or disability, often full-time work is not an option.” It also said while the UK Government’s furlough scheme had been effective in keeping millions in work and protecting them from unemployme­nt, it was “masking significan­t challenges”, especially for those who work fewer than 35 hours a week.

“Since early on in the pandemic, it has been clear that people working in part-time roles have borne the brunt of UK job losses, furlough and further reduction in working hours,” Timewise said, warning just 8 per cent of UK vacancies mention part-time possibilit­ies.

It said the impact of furlough has left many part-timers feeling they are “clinging on to disappeari­ng jobs”, with rates of such employment having fallen to the lowest level since 2010 (24 per cent of all those in work).

The consultanc­y also said part-time work disproport­ionately includes women, ethnic minority groups and younger people, who “have suffered much more than their contempora­ries in the pandemic” – and the share of women in part-time work has fallen to its lowest since records began, at 37 per cent, down from 41 per cent a year ago, for example.

Timewise is, off the back of this report, making a set of recommenda­tions to the UK government, namely the right to ask for flexible working from day one; incentivis­ing flexible working though job creation; providing better employment support for flex job-seekers; and launching a challenge fund for flexible work.

Emma Stewart, its director of developmen­t, said: “With the furlough scheme set to end in September, part-time employees feel they are clinging on to jobs that will soon disappear – and cannot find new part-time jobs to apply for.

"They will effectivel­y be locked out of work. We need a jobs recovery that is inclusive of people who need to work less, not just remotely.

"This is vital to prevent inequaliti­es from widening further – and the clock rolling back on gender equality.”

IES director Tony Wilson said the crisis had seen parttime employment fall at its fastest rate in at least 30 years.

He added that the report “provides more evidence for why we need a new Employment Bill, to improve security for part-time workers and strengthen people’s rights to work flexibly”.

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