Labour Market Update – June 2024
The latest ONS Labour Market Overview show that:
People Management reports that a quarter (27 per cent) of workers in the UK plan to change jobs within the next six months. The poll of 12,000 people in the UK aged 18 to retirement age found that these figures are rising – just 24 per cent planned to move jobs within the next six months this time last year, dropping as low as 22 per cent in 2022 and 19 per cent in 2021. However, in January 2020, 26 per cent said they were planning to change jobs, exceeding their pre-pandemic levels
The Centre for Ageing Better reports that the new government could boost the UK economy by up to £9bn annually by ensuring equal opportunities for older workers in the labour market. The charity’s calculations reveal that closing the employment rate gap between older and younger workers could also bring an additional £1.6 billion a year in income tax and national insurance contributions to the Treasury.
The Centre for Ageing Better urged all political parties on the run up the election to pledge to raise the employment rate of workers aged 50-64 to 75% by 2030 through its new 50+ Employment Commitment. Achieving this goal would mean approximately half a million more 50-64-year-olds in employment. Older workers currently get poorer opportunities and outcomes when it comes to finding work, receiving employment support, facing redundancy or receiving training.
The 50+ Employment Commitment highlights current labour market imbalances affecting older workers, such as:
The KPMG and REC, UK Report on Jobs: North of England latest report highlights that the permanent jobs market has worsened with the preference shifting to temporary staff. There was a sharp drop in the number permanent placements registered by recruitment agencies in the North of England in June, thereby extending the current downturn to a year. However, in contrast, recruiters in the North of England posted a rise in billings for temporary staff in June, marking the second increase in successive months. Firms are reportedly relying on temporary staff and more hesitant to commit to permanent contracts.
Candidates looking for permanent and temporary work has continued to rise. The number of candidates looking for permanent roles increasing again is thought to being in part due to redundancies. Others in surveyed stated this was due to job seekers not being suitably skilled. The survey data also pointed to a further increase in the supply of temporary workers, according to recruiters in the North of England. The rise in temp staff availability was the fastest seen for just shy of a year and steep overall. Survey respondents noted that demand for short-term staff had also picked up.
Hourly rates of pay across the UK rose again in June, thereby marking 40 months of successive increases. UK temp rate inflation was solid having slowed for a second month in a row. All four monitored regions of England posted upticks in hour pay, the fastest of which was in the North of England. Total employee earnings (including bonuses) rose at an unchanged annual pace of 5.9% in the three months to April, according to the latest data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
The government has published the latest immigration system statistics for the year ending March 2024:
The Resolution Foundation latest briefing Life in the slow lane found that the population grew by 0.7 per cent per year between 2010 and 2023, equivalent to 6 million more people. This was the fastest rate of population growth for a century, and three-quarters of it was driven by migration, with the 0.5 percentage point contribution, the biggest in any 20-year period on record.
References
https://kpmg.com/xx/en/home/insights.html
https://www.ons.gov.uk/employmentandlabourmarket/peoplenotinwork/unemployment
https://www.labourproviders.org.uk/access-to-labour-2/
https://www.resolutionfoundation.org/app/uploads/2024/06/Life-in-the-slow-lane.pdf