Britain’s rise in sickness-related inactivity, and resulting fall
in employment, since the start of the pandemic has played out
differently across the country – with traditionally low
employment areas like Glasgow continuing to record strong jobs
growth, but areas with existing high levels of ill-health and
disability like West Wales seeing the biggest rises in long-term
sickness, according to new Resolution Foundation research
published today (Monday).
The Foundation’s latest Labour Market Outlook examines
recent changes to employment and economic inactivity due to
ill-health in different parts of the country.
Britain’s long-term backdrop has been regional labour market gaps
emerging during the deindustrialisation of the 1980s, followed by
a welcome fall in employment gaps between different parts of the
country during the 2000s and 2010s. More recent headlines
have focused on rising economic inactivity due to ill-health and
the fall in employment.
But, while overall employment levels still haven’t yet returned
to pre-pandemic levels – the UK is the only G7 economy not to
have reached this milestone – many traditionally low employment
areas of the country such as Tees Valley and Durham (+1.6
percentage points) and West Central Scotland including Glasgow
(+1.5 percentage points) have experienced positive employment
growth between March 2020 and September 2023.
Conversely, high employment areas such as Cheshire (-2.2
percentage points) Surrey and Sussex (-1.9 percentage points)
have seen the biggest falls. As a result, Britain’s pre-pandemic
trend of falling regional employment gaps has continued in recent
years.
However, the post-pandemic labour market change that has troubled
policy makers the most has been the rise in economic inactivity
due to ill-health, which has risen from 5.1 to 5.8 per cent – an
increase of 300,000 people – between the 12-months to March 2020
and September 2023.
This issue is particularly concerning as people who are inactive
due to ill-health tend to have extended periods of worklessness.
For example, over twice the share of working-age people who are
inactive due to sickness are workless for at least two years,
compared to those who are unemployed.
Worryingly, the areas with the biggest rises in long-term
sickness are those where levels of ill-health were already high.
Places like West Wales and Merseyside have seen levels of
inactivity due to ill-health rise twice as fast as the national
average (1.5 to 1.6 vs 0.7 percentage points), with levels now at
9.1 and 8.7 per cent respectively. As a result, long-term
sickness gaps across Britain are widening.
Looking at the types of places that have experienced sharp rises
in long-term sickness, the research finds that these areas tend
to have particularly high shares of people with a disability, and
a low share of graduates. The share of older workers in a local
area, which was originally considered to be a key driver of
rising economic inactivity, is not associated with rising
long-term sickness.
The worrying rise in long-term sickness has blunted Britain’s
post-pandemic employment recovery. In particular, the report
notes that areas like Lancashire and North West London have seen
both big rises in long-term sickness and falls in employment –
creating huge challenges for their local labour markets.
However, there are important nuances too. Areas like the Tees
Valley and Durham have experienced both rising employment and
rising inactivity due to ill-health. This shows that the
challenges and opportunities of Britain’s post-pandemic labour
market – rising ill-health and a tight labour market – can
co-exist in the same local areas.
Charlie McCurdy, Economist at the Resolution Foundation,
said:
“The UK’s employment rate is slowly returning back to its
pre-pandemic level, a journey that has been prolonged by a
worrying rise in long-term sickness. But some parts of the
country have fared far better than others.
“While Britain’s employment gaps have continued to fall, its
sickness gaps have widened. This has been driven by traditionally
low employment areas like Tees Valley and Glasgow recording
strong jobs growth, while areas like Merseyside that already had
high levels of ill-health and disability experiencing the
sharpest increase in long-term sickness.
“It’s vital that national, regional and local policy makers
understand these regional differences as they face up to the
challenges and opportunities of local labour markets up and down
the country.”