Yorkshire Post

Number of people out of work at lowest level since 1975

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UK UNEMPLOYME­NT dropped to its lowest level in 44 years in the three months to October, as the number of unemployed women hit a record low.

However, the reduction in unemployme­nt came as wage growth stalled over the period and the number of job vacancies also shrank.

The number of unemployed people in the UK decreased by 13,000 to 1.28 million for the quarter, the Office for National Statistics said.

It meant the rate of unemployme­nt stayed flat at 3.8 per cent, surpassing analyst expectatio­ns which had forecast an increase to a 3.9 per cent rate of unemployme­nt.

This was largely driven by a decrease in the unemployme­nt rate for women, which fell to a record low of 3.5 per cent for the period.

Meanwhile, the number of people in work increased by 24,000 to 32.8 million for the quarter, while the proportion of people in employment stayed flat at 76.2 per cent.

Despite the increase, more people were also deemed economical­ly inactive during the period, with the level increasing by 19,000 to 8.61 million for the quarter.

David Freeman, head of labour market and households at the ONS, said: “While the estimate of the employment rate nudged up in the most recent quarter, the longer-term picture has seen it broadly flat over the last few quarters.

“Pay is still increasing in real terms, but its growth rate has slowed in the last few months.”

Average total pay increased by 3.2 per cent in the quarter, as it slowed down from 3.6 per cent the previous month, the ONS said. Analysts had a predicted that growth would only decline to 3.4 per cent. The figures also revealed that job vacancies slid by 20,000 to 794,000.

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