Khaleej Times

UK jobs growth at all-time high, but salaries stagnate

- William Schomberg and Alistair Smout

london — British workers saw their pay grow more slowly than expected at the end of last year, official data showed on Wednesday, ahead of a likely squeeze on their living standards from higher inflation in 2017.

At the same time, the employment rate hit a fresh all-time high as the number of people in work rose in the three months to December having fallen in the two previous monthly reports.

Britain’s labour market remained strong in 2016 despite the referendum decision in June to leave the European Union.

The unemployme­nt rate in the October-to-December period held at an 11-year low of 4.8 per cent, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.

But pay growth remains weak and Wednesday’s data showed that, when adjusted for inflation, the rise in earnings was the slowest since the three months to February 2015.

“With prices rising faster, real pay growth is now slowing down,” Frances O’Grady, the head of Britain’s Trades Union Congress umbrella group, said. “This will be worrying for families whose have still not seen their living standards recover following the financial crisis.”

Sterling dropped to a one-week low after the release.

The data chimes with the Bank of England’s view that despite Britain’s strong economic growth, interest rates should remain at their record low level.

British inflation hit its highest level since mid-2014 in January at 1.8 per cent and many economists think it will pass three per cent this year. The BoE believes much of the increase is due to the temporary effect of sterling’s fall after the Brexit vote rather than a price-pay spiral.

The ONS said workers’ total earnings including bonuses rose by an annual 2.6 per cent, slowing from 2.8 per cent in the three months to November. Economists taking part in a Reuters poll had expected wage growth of 2.8 per cent.

It was the first time that total pay growth had slowed since the three months to July.

A separate survey showed expectatio­ns among households about rising living costs over the next year were the strongest in three years.

In December alone, the ONS said total wage growth slowed sharply to 1.9 per cent, its weakest pace since February, reflecting fewer bonuses paid than in December 2015.

Excluding bonuses, growth in earnings in the fourth quarter also slowed.

The number of unemployme­nt benefit claimants fell by 42,400 to 787,400 in January compared with a revised fall of 20,500 in December. Economists had expected the number of claimants to rise by 800.

ONS officials said the claimant count series was volatile due to the continued roll-out of a new universal credit benefit system.

EU migrant workers fall

In a possible sign of how the Brexit vote and the subsequent fall in the value of the pound are affecting the attractive­ness of Britain as a place to work for migrants, the ONS data showed the first fall in the number of people from other EU countries employed in Britain since the three months to September 2014. — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters ?? The Bank of England building in London. Britain’s labour market remained strong in 2016 despite the Brexit referendum.
— Reuters The Bank of England building in London. Britain’s labour market remained strong in 2016 despite the Brexit referendum.

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