South Wales Echo

2.7 million working-age adults ‘too sick to work’

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BRITAIN is in the midst of the longest sustained rise in sicknessre­lated inactivity since the 1990s, according to research.

Economic inactivity because of long-term sickness has increased on an annual basis since July 2019, the longest sustained rise since 1994-1998, said the Resolution Foundation.

The think tank said its study found that a near record 2.7 million working-age adults are too sick to work, with increases concentrat­ed among the youngest and oldest workers.

While the labour market is returning to normal in terms of pay growth, vacancies and unemployme­nt after a “tumultuous” few years, the Covid-19 pandemic has left an “alarming” legacy of rising longterm sickness, said the report.

The number of working-age adults economical­ly inactive due to ill health rose from 2.1 million in July 2019 to a peak of 2.8 million by October 2023, before falling slightly to 2.7 million in December 2023, the foundation reported.

The rise in long-term sickness means that the UK is the only G7 economy not to have returned to its pre-pandemic employment rate, according to the research.

The foundation said the upward trend in long-term sickness started before the pandemic and has lasted for 54 months.

The longest previous period of increasing economic inactivity due to ill health was for 55 months, between 1994 and 1998.

Louise Murphy, senior economist at the Resolution Foundation, said: “Britain’s labour market is finally returning to normal, but the pandemic has left an alarming legacy of the longest sustained rise in sickness-related inactivity since the 1990s. As a result, 2.7 million people are now too sick to work.

“Younger and older people together account for nine-10ths of the rise in overall economic inactivity, which could have serious effects both on individual­s’ living standards and career paths, as well as wider strains on the NHS and welfare spending if we fail to improve the nation’s health and reduce economic inactivity.”

Shazia Ejaz, the recruitmen­t and employment confederat­ion director of campaigns and research, said: “Our own research suggests a continued failure to overcome labour shortages will cost the economy up to £39bn every year in less GDP and productivi­ty. So, the inactivity problem needs to be addressed with urgency.”

Liz Kendall, shadow work and pensions secretary, said: “A healthy nation is critical to a healthy economy, but the Tories have completely failed on both.

“Fourteen years of Tory economic failure has left millions of people locked out of work.”

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