Yorkshire Post

North sees first job decline in six years

- ROS SNOWDON CITY EDITOR ■ Email: ros.snowdon@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @RosSnowdon­YPN

ECONOMY: The North has seen the first decline in permanent job placements in over six years, according to accountanc­y giant KPMG.

Permanent staff placements fell in January for the first time in 77 months. The reduction was the first seen since August 2012. KPMG blamed Brexit uncertaint­y.

THE NORTH has seen the first decline in permanent job placements in over six years, according to KPMG’s latest report on jobs for the North of England.

Permanent staff placements fell in January for the first time in 77 months. The reduction was the first seen since August 2012, and the fastest for just over six-and-ahalf years.

KPMG said recruitmen­t agencies noted a hesitancy in hiring among their clients due to Brexitrela­ted uncertaint­y.

Permanent staff appointmen­ts also fell at the national level at the start of 2019. Although only marginal, the decline was driven by contractio­ns in three of the four monitored English regions. The South of England was the only area to record growth.

Chris Hearld, Northern regional chairman at KPMG UK, said: “Northern businesses might want to hire staff, but a chronic shortage of labour – particular­ly skilled workers – is now starting to bite. Not only will companies feel under-resourced, they are also seeing wage and salary demands increase which will put more pressure on the bottom line.

“The message coming from the data is clear – the local business community needs to make sure that it continues to invest in creating, attracting and retaining talent if it to remain resilient and competitiv­e.”

Recruitmen­t and Employment Confederat­ion chief executive Neil Carberry added: “This is the first month since July 2016 where permanent placement numbers have dropped, with weaker – but still positive – performanc­e for temporary roles, and the lowest rate of vacancy growth for over two years.

“But we should be careful not to overreact – employment rates are high, and the performanc­e of our labour market overall is still strong. We also know that key sectors such as accounting, engineerin­g and IT are facing shortages.”

Mr Carberry said the survey results are a sharp reminder to politician­s in Westminste­r and in Brussels of the need to provide businesses with clarity about the path ahead, so they can invest with confidence.

“In the public sector, the NHS continues to find it particular­ly difficult to find care workers and nurses – the effects of which are being felt by patients and overworked existing staff,” he said.

“Along with other sector shortages, this again emphasises the need for pragmatism on immigratio­n and a clear post-Brexit transition period.”

The research showed that billings received from the employment of short-term workers in the North of England also fell for the first time in six-and-a-half years in January. Although recruitmen­t consultanc­ies reported only a marginal rate of decline overall, the result contrasted with a modest expansion across the UK as a whole.

The latest UK-wide increase was the softest since September 2015, with a reduction in the capital also weighing on the UK average. The Midlands posted the fastest rate of growth, outpacing the South of England.

January survey data pointed to softer increases in demand for both permanent and temporary workers in the North of England. Notably, permanent staff vacancies grew at the slowest rate for 29 months.

Despite registerin­g a solid rise overall, growth of demand was softer than that seen at the national level. Short-term positions also rose at the weakest rate since August 2016, and at a pace that was slower than the UK average.

KPMG said the number of candidates available to fill permanent job positions in the North of England also fell in January.

Permanent staff supply has now contracted in each month for the past six years. The pace of decline quickened compared with December, registerin­g the fastest fall since December 2017.

Recruitmen­t consultanc­ies said shortages were primarily for skilled workers.

 ??  ?? CHRIS HEARLD: ‘Shortage of skiller labour – particular­ly skilled workers – is now starting to bite.’
CHRIS HEARLD: ‘Shortage of skiller labour – particular­ly skilled workers – is now starting to bite.’

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