Business World

UK wages pick up as fewer Eastern EU workers fill jobs

-

UK pay is picking up after employment among citizens of the eastern countries that joined the European Union more than a decade ago fell for the first time since 2009.

Average weekly earnings excluding bonuses rose 2.5% in the fourth quarter from a year earlier, the most since December 2016, the Office for National Statistics said on Wednesday. The overall employment rate rose to 75.2%, close to a record, though unemployme­nt increased to 4.4% as fewer workers were economical­ly inactive.

While the figures may be welcomed by Brexit supporters who complained that open immigratio­n undermined the wages of local workers, the data overall provides a more mixed picture for policy makers. Bank of England ( BoE) Governor Mark Carney may be asked about them when he appears before Parliament’s Treasury Committee later on Wednesday.

Speculatio­n has mounted in recent weeks that the BoE’s Monetary Policy Committee could raise interest rates again as early as May, but the first increase in the jobless rate in 17 months may undermine rate bets in the short term, according to Scotiabank economist Alan Clarke.

“In MPC terms, higher unemployme­nt means more spare capacity and more tolerance for above- target inflation and could support the doves,” he said. “Ultimately we expect higher wage inflation to dominate, but as we warned, it was never going to be smooth sailing.”

BoE officials estimate there is little slack left in the economy, with surveys suggesting recruitmen­t difficulti­es are forcing some firms to raise wages. Central- bank forecasts show unemployme­nt averaging 4.2% in the coming quarters, below the 4.25% rate officials say the economy can sustain without generating inflationa­ry pressure.

The pound weakened after the data, sliding 0.5%to $1.3923 as of 11:28 a.m. London time. UK pay growth is still slower than inflation, which is running at 3%. Private-sector pay gains accelerate­d to 2.6% from 2.5%.

Employment rose by 330,000 last year and the gain was largely driven by UK nationals, the ONS said. Employment among EU8 nationals fell by 1%, and there was a 1.5% drop among non- EU citizens. Overall, employment of non- UK nationals rose by 3.1%, half the pace seen in 2016.

The outlook for interest rates also depends on whether any pickup in wages is matched by productivi­ty improvemen­ts, and there were some positive signs in the latest data.

Output per hour gained 0.8% in the fourth quarter following a 0.9% gain in the previous three months, which was the most in six years. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? WORKERS prepare customer orders for dispatch as they work around goods stored inside an Amazon.co.uk fulfillmen­t center in Peterborou­gh, England.
WORKERS prepare customer orders for dispatch as they work around goods stored inside an Amazon.co.uk fulfillmen­t center in Peterborou­gh, England.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines