Yorkshire Post

Call for job creation and protection

- CHARLES BROWN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

JOBS: The biggest job creation package in peacetime is needed to head off a massive increase in unemployme­nt as the UK recovers from the coronaviru­s crisis.

The Resolution Foundation also called for a job protection scheme to subsidise the wages of hospitalit­y workers, who are among those hardest hit.

THE BIGGEST job creation package in peacetime is needed to head off a massive increase in unemployme­nt as the UK recovers from the coronaviru­s crisis, according to a new report.

The Resolution Foundation also called for a job protection scheme to subsidise the wages of hospitalit­y workers, who are among those hardest hit by the impact of the lockdown.

Measures are needed to respond to the highest unemployme­nt since the early 1990s, said the think-tank.

The foundation argued that policymake­rs need to recognise the “unique nature” of the crisis, with lasting job losses being concentrat­ed in hardest-hit sectors.

During the lockdown, workers in hospitalit­y, non-food retail and arts, leisure and entertainm­ent have been more than twice as likely to have experience­d job changes than the economy as a whole, said the report.

This was said to have put young people and low-paid workers in the firing line, as they are most likely to work in hard-hit sectors. The Government was urged to switch its job retention scheme into a job protection scheme, subsidisin­g the wages of those working in the hardest-hit sectors, to enable firms to maintain employment.

Publicly-funded job creation should be focused on areas such as expanding the social care workforce and retrofitti­ng homes, while young people should be given job and training guarantees to help tackle youth unemployme­nt and the long-term scarring effects it can have on young people’s careers, said the foundation.

Nye Cominetti, senior economist at the Resolution Foundation, said: “Britain is slowly emerging from the lockdown that brought the economy to a halt and sent employment tumbling, but we are a long way off returning to business as usual, and its jobs crisis is far from over.

“A second wave of unemployme­nt later this year, following the phasing out of the job retention scheme, could leave Britain with the highest unemployme­nt levels in a generation.

“The Government’s approach should include a job protection scheme to maintain employment in hardest-hit sectors and the biggest ever peacetime job creation programme.” He said public investment in social care and retrofitti­ng homes could spur job creation, help an ageing population and tackle climate change.

Doncaster North MP Ed Miliband warned of “Thatcher levels” of unemployme­nt should the Government fail to support firms as the UK comes out of the coronaviru­s crisis.

He said up to one million people could be added to the jobless total of 2.8m unless support is supplied from August.

Meanwhile, Home Secretary Priti Patel warned the rise of mass gatherings was “unacceptab­le” and that it risked a second spike of coronaviru­s.

She confirmed reports that Leicester faced becoming the first area to have a local lockdown imposed.

We are a long way off returning to business as usual.

Nye Cominetti, senior economist at the Resolution Foundation.

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