Eastern Eye (UK)

Unexpected fall in jobless rate

DROP LINKED TO MANY MEN LEAVING THE LABOUR MARKET

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BRITAIN’S unemployme­nt rate unexpected­ly fell for a second month in a row to 4.9 per cent in the December-to-February period, most of which the country spent under a tight Covid-19 lockdown, official figures showed on Tuesday (20).

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) linked the fall to a large volume of men leaving the jobs market altogether. The so-called inactivity rate rose by 0.2 percentage points in the three months to February, echoing a rise during the first lockdown of last year.

There was another reminder of the precarious state of the labour market in figures from Britain’s tax office which showed the number of employees on company payrolls fell by 56,000 between February and March, the first decline in four months.

That pushed up the total number of jobs lost since the onset of the coronaviru­s pandemic to 813,000 – more than half of which were held by people aged under 25, with hospitalit­y-heavy London the hardest-hit region, the ONS said.

Following the latest data, chancellor Rishi Sunak said “protecting jobs and the economy has been my main focus since this pandemic began” with 11.2 million workers furloughed.

The government recently began lifting strict lockdown restrictio­ns, allowing people to once more enter clothes shops, eat in outdoor areas belonging to restaurant­s and pubs, get their hair cut in salons and visit gyms.

Britain’s economy shrank by almost 10 per cent in 2020, a bigger slump than almost all its European peers, after it locked down later and for longer than many of them. Some 363,000 people are classed as long-term unemployed after having been out of work for a year or more but with a similar number in the six-to-12-month bracket, that figure could soon rise sharply.

“If we don’t act quickly, in particular by focusing our support on the long-term

unemployed, then we are risking another lost generation,” Tony Wilson, director of the Institute for Employment Studies, said.

The ONS said there was a marked rise in job vacancies in March, especially in sectors such as hospitalit­y which reopened for outdoor business last week.

In March the chancellor extended the furlough scheme – which pays the wages of around one in five employees – until the end of September although employers will have to start contributi­ng towards some of its costs from July. Without the scheme, the jobless rate would be far higher – a year ago, Britain’s budget forecaster­s said it could hit 10 per cent. The Bank of England will be watching how many jobs are lost when it expires as it considers how long it needs to keep its huge economic stimulus programme in place.

Suren Thiru, head of economics at the British Chambers of Commerce, said longterm unemployme­nt, particular­ly among young people, might mean progress towards pre-pandemic levels in the labour market lags behind the wider economic recovery. “Further action will be needed to support the labour market when the furlough scheme ends, including supporting businesses to recruit and retain staff through a temporary cut in employer national insurance contributi­ons,” he said.

Britain’s headline measure of pay growth again rose strongly in the three months to February, up 4.5 per cent in annual terms. But the ONS said the reading was skewed higher by a drop in the number of lower-paid and part-time jobs. After accounting for this, pay growth was much weaker at 2.5 per cent, it estimated.

 ??  ?? FOCUS ON RECOVERY: Boris Johnson
FOCUS ON RECOVERY: Boris Johnson

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