MP, Labour's Acting Shadow
Work and Pensions Secretary, responding to the labour
market statistics published this morning by the ONS, said:
“The morning after told us his plan was working,
these damning new figures prove that things are just getting
worse: employment down, economic inactivity up and unemployment
rising.
“It's no wonder there are now a record number of people locked
out of work due to long-term sickness, given NHS waiting lists
are spiralling and the Tories have pushed our NHS to its knees.
“It's Labour who have the plan to get Britain working by driving
down waiting lists, reforming job centres, making work pay and
supporting people into good jobs across every part of the
country. Change with Labour can't come soon enough.”
Ends
Notes:
-
The UK employment rate (for people aged 16 to 64 years) was
estimated at 74.5% in January to March 2024, below estimates
of a year ago, and decreased in the latest quarter.
-
The UK unemployment rate (for people aged 16 years and over)
was estimated at 4.3% in January to March 2024, above
estimates of a year ago, and increased in the latest
quarter.
-
The UK economic inactivity rate for people aged 16 to 64
years was estimated at 22.1% in January to March 2024, above
estimates of a year ago, and increased in the latest quarter.
Responding to today's (Tuesday) ONS
labour market figures, which shows unemployment rising by 166,000
over the last quarter to 1,486,000
(4.3%), TUC General
Secretary Paul
Nowak said:
“The Tories are presiding over a
rapidly deteriorating jobs market.
“Unemployment and economic inactivity are shooting up. Over
a million people are trapped on zero-hours contracts. And real
wages are still worth less than in
2008.
“Forget ‘green shoots' - everywhere
you look the Conservatives are failing working
people.
“Our country is crying out for a
proper economic plan for jobs and growth to make sure household
incomes can recover and everyone is secure at
work.
“And our NHS desperately needs
investment to get waiting lists back down. When people can access
treatment faster, they will return to work
sooner.”
TUC analysis published yesterday
(Monday) showed the number of women economically inactive as a
result of ill- health has increased by more than 500,000 over
last five years.
The UK's economic slowdown last year has caused Britain's jobs
recovery to falter, with its post-pandemic workforce shrinking by
the equivalent by the equivalent of one million workers. But this
hasn't yet fed through into pay packets, with real wages growing
at their fastest in rate in over two years, the Resolution
Foundation said today (Tuesday).
While most major economies have already surpassed their
pre-pandemic employment rates, the UK's employment recovery has
been flat or falling for the past six months, and the current
16-64 employment rate of 74.5 per cent is closer to the pandemic
employment low of 74.1 per cent than the pre-pandemic rate of
76.2 per cent. Britain's post-pandemic workforce has shrunk by
the equivalent of one million workers.
This employment fall isn't just about lower participation –
demand from employers is also weakening. Vacancies continue to
fall, and unemployment has risen in the past four months, rising
0.5 percentage points to its current rate of 4.3 per cent. The
number of employee jobs in HMRC's PAYE data has fallen for three
months in a row.
However, the fall in employment has not yet fed through into pay
packets, with real wages growing at a healthy rate of 2 per cent
in the twelve months to March 2024 – the fastest growth since
September 2021.
In fact, real wages have grown almost as much as in the past
twelve months as they have done over the previous 16 years in
total (2.1 per cent between February 2008 and February 2024).
Nye Cominetti, Principal Economist at the Resolution
Foundation, said:
“Britain's jobs recovery continues to falter, with the workforce
shrinking by the equivalent of one million workers since
pre-pandemic times. This worrying employment fall shows the
damage that an economic slowdown can cause.
“The news for those in work is more positive however, with real
wages growing almost as much over the past 12 months as they did
in the 16 years prior to this.
“The big question is whether the UK's recent economic recovery
will boost employment and raise output per worker, which will be
needed to sustain its mini pay recovery.”