The UK’s record jobs market continued into 2019 with 473,000 more
people in work in January compared to a year ago, while the UK’s
employment rate reached an all-time high of 76.1%.
New figures show that wages continued to outstrip inflation for
12 months in a row.
Minister of State for Employment welcomed the figures from the
Office for National Statistics (ONS), which also showed
unemployment falling below 4% for the first time since the
mid-1970’s.
Companies are driving the growth, with private sector employment
up by 3.8 million since 2010. The figures also revealed a higher
rate of women in work than ever before.
Minister of State for Employment said:
Today’s employment figures are further evidence of the strong
economy the Chancellor detailed in last week’s spring
statement, showing how our pro-business policies are delivering
record employment.
2019 has continued to be a record breaker, with the employment
rate topping 76% for the first time, record female employment
and unemployment falling below 4% for the first time in 44
years.
Our jobs market remains resilient as we see more people than
ever before benefitting from earning a wage. By backing the
government’s Brexit deal and giving certainty to business, MPs
have the chance to safeguard this jobs track record.
The government is helping even more people benefit from a
well-paid job by:
-
backing businesses to create good jobs with our modern
Industrial Strategy, while ensuring they play by the rules,
so we are closing tax loopholes, strengthening workers’
rights, and tightening the rules big businesses must follow
-
investing in the infrastructure, training and apprenticeships
we need for our future, with public investment at the highest
sustained level in 40 years
-
introducing Universal Credit which is helping people move
into work faster and stay in it longer, while recent Budget
measures mean 2.4 million families will keep up to an extra
£630 per year of what they earn
-
helping people stay in work longer with our Fuller Working Lives
strategy, which supports employers to recruit, re-train
and retain older workers
-
tackling inequalities in employment highlighted by
the Race Disparity
Audit, through targeted support in 20 areas around the
country and £90 million announced by the Prime Minister to
help young people.