Western Morning News

Jobs market shows no sign of slowing down

- WILLIAM TELFORD william.telford@reachplc.com

THE South West’s jobs market is continuing to rebound from the Covid-19 crisis, with the number of people receiving benefits falling and thousands of jobs available.

The end of the Government’s furlough scheme in September appears to have done little to dent a surging jobs situation in the region. New figures from the Department of Work and Pensions reveal 418,514 people were receiving Universal Credit (UC) in the South West in mid-October – down by 447 on a month earlier. The statistics were down across the region, with 26,629 claimants in Plymouth, down 231 in a month, and the 45,388 in Cornwall being 106 fewer, for example.

UC claimants can be working and topping up their earnings with benefits, and across the UK the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said the number of payrolled workers surged by 160,000 or 0.6% between September and October to 29.3million. It said the payrolled worker numbers were now “well above” levels seen before the pandemic struck, up 235,000 since February, 2020.

The UK unemployme­nt rate also fell once more to 4.3% between July to September, down from 4.5% between June and August, in spite of the furlough scheme coming to an end on September 30. The ONS said survey responses so far suggest only a small number of redundanci­es have been made among the 1.1 million still on furlough when the scheme closed, with vacancies hitting another record high.

Meanwhile, the Kickstart programme, aimed at easing young people into work, has seen 100,000 youngsters find positions with employers. The number of job vacancies continues to rise, too, to such an extent that many employers are having real difficulty finding skilled and unskilled workers.

With more than 2,000 vacancies being advertised in the Plymouth area, dozens of businesses met at a Skills4Ply­mouth Summit, at City College Plymouth, and will produce a five-year action plan in early 2022, setting out how the recruitmen­t problem can be addressed.

Beverly Phillips, of Jobcentre Plus in the South West, said employers have been seeking workers across a number of sectors, including care, cleaning, security, retail, logistics, warehousin­g, with employers such as the NHS and China Fleet recruiting in Plymouth.

She added: “There are also jobs in constructi­on, even at this time of year, when work normally peters out. They are looking for people, so it’s all looking good at the moment and getting young people into work is helping.”

The robust new data has reinforced expectatio­ns that the Bank of England will move to hike interest rates to cool inflation before Christmas, if next month’s jobs figures, just before the policymake­r vote, remain as rosy.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak hailed the latest jobs figures as being “testament to the extraordin­ary success of the furlough scheme”. However, the ONS cautioned the full effect of furlough closing may yet be felt, with some workers let go still potentiall­y working out their notice and on redundancy pay.

Sam Beckett, ONS head of economic statistics, said: “It might take a few months to see the full impact of furlough coming to an end, as people who lost their jobs at the end of September could still be receiving redundancy pay. However, October’s early estimate shows the number of people on the payroll rose strongly on the month and stands well above its pre-pandemic level.”

She added: “There is also no sign of an upturn in redundanci­es and businesses tell us that only a very small proportion of their previously furloughed staff have been laid off.”

There were almost nine million British workers on furlough support at the peak, but this had dwindled to just over a million in its final weeks and business surveys suggest most on furlough returned to work in October. The data also showed that job vacancies soared to a record 1.17 million in the three months to October – 388,000 higher than before the pandemic as firms battled to hire amid labour shortages.

 ?? Philip Toscano ?? > The South West has job vacancies in multiple sectors
Philip Toscano > The South West has job vacancies in multiple sectors

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