Eastern Eye (UK)

UK firms layoffs hit new high in second lockdown SUNAK URGED TO EXTEND SUPPORT IN MARCH BUDGET AS UNEMPLOYME­NT AT FIVE-YEAR HIGH

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BRITAIN’S unemployme­nt rate hit its highest in nearly five years in the three months to November, when coronaviru­s cases began to rise for a second time and most of the country returned to a partial lockdown.

Redundanci­es touched a record high, taking the unemployme­nt rate to five per cent, its highest since mid-2016, according to official data, although the increase was slightly weaker than economists’ forecasts.

There were signs of a limited recovery in December, when lockdown measures eased, although a deteriorat­ion is likely in early 2021 as a tougher lockdown shut schools and closed most non-essential businesses to the public.

Tax data for December showed a 52,000 increase in the number of staff on company payrolls from November, but there were 828,000 fewer workers on company payrolls than in February.

Economists said the data showed the jobs market was holding up better than many forecaster­s had feared.

Unemployme­nt has been kept down by the government’s Job Retention

Scheme, which supported 2.4 million jobs as of October 31, down from a peak of 8.9 million in May. The programme is Britain’s most expensive Covid-19 economic support measure, costing £46.4 billion up to mid-December, and is due to end on April 30.

“This crisis has gone on far longer than any of us hoped – and every job lost as a result is a tragedy,” chancellor Sunak said on Tuesday (26). “We’re throwing everything we’ve got at supporting businesses, individual­s and families,” he added.

Tej Parikh, chief economist at the Institute of Directors, urged

Sunak to extend support for jobs in his March 3 budget. “The latest lockdown will have only added further pressure on firms with troubled balance sheets, which means more jobs are likely to be lost in the coming months,” Parikh said.

The number of people in employment dropped 88,000 in the three months to the end of November, the smallest fall since the start of the pandemic and less than the 100,000 drop forecast by economists in a Reuters poll.

Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey said this month he believed the underlying jobless rate was higher, as the official definition excludes people without work who have temporaril­y postponed their job search due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The data showed growth in wages rose by an annual 3.6 per cent, the biggest increase in more than a year.

But the ONS said the increase largely reflected how the brunt of job cuts and lost pay had fallen on workers in lower-paid sectors and on part-time workers. Underlying pay growth was less than two per cent, it said.

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 ??  ?? CRISIS: The brunt of job cuts has mostly fallen on workers in lower-paid sectors, say experts; (below) Rishi Sunak
CRISIS: The brunt of job cuts has mostly fallen on workers in lower-paid sectors, say experts; (below) Rishi Sunak

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