The Office for
National Statistics (ONS) has released the latest set of UK labour market data,
mostly covering the three months November 2013 to January 2014.
The employment
figures continue to be strong, up by a net 105,000 in the latest quarter,
though a big rise in self-employment (which increased by 211,000) masked a surprising
fall of 60,000 in the number of employees in employment. The latter figure
appears odd when set against the broader range of data and should therefore be
treated with caution, especially since the entire fall is due to fewer
employees working part-time, which was partly offset by an increase in the
number of employees working full-time. Moreover, the level of job vacancies increased
by 23,000 on the quarter and at 588,000 is 92,000 higher than a year earlier
and getting ever close to the pre-recession level.
Total unemployment
on the headline ILO measure fell by 63,000 in the quarter, the unemployment rate
falling from 7.4% to 7.2%. The unemployment trend thus remains downward albeit
because the ONS calculates change in unemployment on the basis of a quarterly
rather than monthly comparison the headline unemployment rate is the same as
that published in February. Youth unemployment (16-24 year olds) fell by 29,000
and long-term unemployment (people unemployed for more than a year) fell by 38,000.
The administrative count of people unemployed and in receipt of Jobseeker’s
Allowance fell by 34,000 between January and February.
Perhaps the most
significant news from the latest labour market statistics is that we are at
last seeing signs that the economic recovery is breathing life into the pay
figures. The combination of job vacancies rising back toward the pre-recession
level and falling unemployment has lifted pay growth to within sight of price
inflation, especially in the private sector where the real pay squeeze eased
markedly around the turn of the year. Regular pay (excluding bonuses) in the private
sector is now increasing at an annual rate of 1.6%, not too far off the
corresponding 1.9% rate of consumer price inflation. In the public sector
regular pay is growing much more slowly (averaging 0.6%), though the figure is
higher (1.1%) when financial services organisations are excluded. It is therefore
now very likely that the average real pay squeeze will end in the coming
months, with private sector workers set to enjoy real pay rises for the first
time since 2009.
The better news on
pay reflects the changing balance of employment growth. Adjusting for
statistical reclassification, the private sector added 118,000 jobs in the
final quarter of 2013 while the public sector shed 13,000 jobs. The immediate labour
market outlook is thus one of much better news on jobs and pay for private
sector workers but continued job cuts and an ongoing severe real pay cut for
public sector workers.
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