Eastern Eye (UK)

Transport and IT labour crunch

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BRITAIN’s employers are struggling with acute staff shortages, business reports said, blaming Brexit and a sharp drop in overseas workers due to Covid.

The Recruitmen­t and Employment Confederat­ion (REC) and accountanc­y firm KPMG have said the number of available workers plunged in June at the fastest rate since 1997, adding that the rush to reopen after pandemic restrictio­ns is leading to bottleneck­s.

According to the REC and KPMG survey of more than 400 recruitmen­t firms, the number of permanent jobs available in England rose at its fastest rate since 1997 in June as the economy reopened. But at the same time availabili­ty of workers hit a 24-year low.

Brexit, pandemic-related uncertaint­y and the furlough scheme have all weighed on the number of job seekers available, as per the firms.

Key sectors such as transport and logistics, hospitalit­y, manufactur­ing and constructi­on are reporting hiring challenges, said the report, adding that the issue is now spreading to typically higher-paying sectors such as finance, IT, accounting and engineerin­g. Demand was also “historical­ly strong” across the public sector, says the report.

The report noted there has been a rapid increase in starting pay rates, as both permanent appointmen­ts and temporary billings increased sharply.

Unemployme­nt in the UK has fallen to 4.7 per cent, which is far below the expectatio­ns last year that Covid-19 might drive up job losses at the fastest rate since the 1980s, leading to 12 per cent unemployme­nt.

Another survey by the British Chambers of Commerce last Thursday (8) pointed to employers facing increasing recruitmen­t difficulti­es, saying 70 per cent firms that tried to hire staff had to struggle to find them. An estimated 1.3 million non-UK workers have left the country during the pandemic.

Business leaders said that easing post-Brexit immigratio­n rules could help address shortages, but they also called for further investment in skills and training from the government to increase the numbers of domestic candidates.

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