Daily Sabah (Turkey)

UK jobless rate spikes to 4.5% in August

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UNEMPLOYME­NT across the United Kingdom spiked sharply in August, a clear signal that the jobless rate is heading toward levels not seen in nearly 30 years when a British government salary-support scheme ends this month and new local restrictio­ns are imposed to suppress a second wave of the coronaviru­s.

The Office for National Statistics said yesterday that unemployme­nt rose by 138,000 in the three months to August from the previous three-month period. The unemployme­nt rate jumped to 4.5%, its highest rate since early 2017, from 4.1% in the previous quarter.

So far, Britain has been spared the sharp rises in unemployme­nt seen in the United States because of the government’s Coronaviru­s Job Retention Scheme, which has paid most of the salaries of workers who have not been fired. Some 1.2 million employers have taken advantage of the program to furlough 9.6 million people at a cost to the government of nearly 40 billion pounds ($52 billion).

At one stage, around 30% of the U.K.’s working population was on furlough. Although they weren’t working over the past few months, they were not counted as unemployed. Since the program ends at the end of October, many of those still on furlough are expected to be made redundant and unemployme­nt to rise further.

Finance minister Rishi Sunak reiterated yesterday that his priority remained to slow the rising job losses. However, he is replacing a 50 billion-pound wage-subsidy scheme, which expires at the end of this month, with a less generous program.

“I’ve been honest with people from the start that we would unfortunat­ely not be able to save every job,” he said. And with many parts of the U.K. seeing large increases in coronaviru­s infections and the government imposing local restrictio­ns, there are concerns that unemployme­nt could soar toward 3 million, levels not seen since the early 1990s.

“A higher case rate, new restrictio­ns and less government support are likely to push unemployme­nt up over the winter months,” said Ian Stewart, chief economist at Deloitte. “The path of the virus continues to dictate the direction of the economy.”

On Monday, the government carved England into three tiers of coronaviru­s risk in a bid to slow a resurgent outbreak, putting the northern city of Liverpool into the highest-risk category and shutting its pubs, gyms and betting shops.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the threelevel system was designed to “simplify and standardiz­e” a confusing patchwork of local rules, as the country enters a “crucial phase.” Johnson said hospitals are filling up with more COVID-19 patients than in March when he ordered a national lockdown. To ease the economic hit from the new restrictio­ns, the government has said it will pay two-thirds of the salaries of workers in companies that have to close as a result of the new restrictio­ns.

Leaders across the north of England and unions have slammed the new package as “unacceptab­le” because it’s not as generous as the national scheme and because it doesn’t include workers in companies that would be affected indirectly.”

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