The Daily Telegraph

Britain only developed country to miss out on job recovery from lows of pandemic era

Surge in early retirement and long-term sickness leaves UK unlikely to bounce back in 2023

- By Eir Nolsøe

‘We’re quite unusual. Most countries are not struggling with participat­ion the way we are’

BRITAIN will next year be the only developed country with fewer people in work than before the Covid crisis after a surge in early retirement and ill health, experts have said.

The UK employment rate is still 1 percentage point below its pre-pandemic level and is unlikely to bounce back in 2023, according to the Institute for Employment Studies (IES). By contrast, the European Union’s employment rate is 2.1 points above its level at the start of 2020. Employment is 0.6 points higher for the average country in the OECD club of rich nations.

Only Latvia and Switzerlan­d have performed worse than the UK so far, but both their employment rates are now recovering and are likely to surpass their pre-covid peaks next year.

Andy Haldane, former chief economist at the Bank of England, said poor health is increasing­ly a factor holding back the workforce and so the economy, the Guardian reported.

“We’re in a situation for the first time, probably since the Industrial Revolution,

where health and wellbeing are in retreat,” said Mr Haldane.

It came as separate research from audit firm KPMG and the Recruitmen­t and Employment Confederat­ion suggested that job growth is slowing down in Britain, with the number of people hired into permanent new roles falling in October for the first time in 20 months. Claire Warnes, a partner at KPMG, said: “The looming recession is clearly impacting the UK jobs market.”

The IES found that in Britain, the number of people classed as “economical­ly inactive” – neither in a job nor looking for work – has risen by 600,000 in the past three years.

This has been driven by 50,000 workers taking early retirement and around 360,000 more people suffering long-term health problems – a figure thought to include many older people who have in effect retired early because they are too ill to ever go back to a job.

An increase in the number of people who are studying accounts for most of the remaining difference.

Tony Wilson, director of the IES, said: “We’re quite unusual internatio­nally.

Most countries are not struggling with participat­ion the way we are.”

The increase in long-term sickness has coincided with record NHS waiting lists, which reached 7m in August.

With lower migration and the large generation of baby boomers retiring, a smaller labour force will likely become a lasting change, according to the IES.

Mr Wilson said that government policy has done little to help. He suggested that more should be done to help disabled people get jobs and support families struggling with childcare costs.

Meanwhile, there are concerns that Treasury plans for a tax raid on pension savings will spur more middle-class profession­als to retire early.

Jeremy Hunt, the Chancellor, is expected to freeze the lifetime allowance again later this month, limiting the maximum that can be saved into a pension pot without incurring tax penalties to £1m. Many older people close to hitting this limit are expected to retire and take their pensions instead of breaching it.

Mr Wilson described the policy as a “flipping mess”, which is already “causing problems on keeping people in senior and well paid [ jobs]”.

Workers exiting the labour force are driving up inflation and so causing interest rates to rise, the Bank of England’s chief economist Huw Pill said this week.

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