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A recruitment sign in Pizza Express
Job vacancies, particularly in the hospitality industry such as restaurants, are not being filled. Photograph: Maureen McLean/Rex/Shutterstock
Job vacancies, particularly in the hospitality industry such as restaurants, are not being filled. Photograph: Maureen McLean/Rex/Shutterstock

UK job vacancies hit record amid Brexit and Covid staff shortages

This article is more than 2 years old

Rise matched by steep fall in unemployment and rise in staff on payrolls to 29.2 million

Job vacancies soared to a record high of almost 1.2m in September, according to official figures, as employers hunted for staff to meet shortages brought on by Brexit and the pandemic.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) figures also showed a 207,000 increase in the number of people on payrolls to a record 29.2 million – 120,000 above pre-pandemic levels – and a steep fall in unemployment before the furlough scheme came to an end at the end of September.

London experienced the biggest rise in employment as the capital made up ground with the rest of the country after a large drop during the pandemic, but unlike many other areas, failed to reach pre-pandemic levels.

In the three months to September, vacancies grew across most sectors driven by a jump in demand for workers by shop owners and wholesalers while motor garages looked for 35,000 extra staff.

Spiralling demand for HGV drivers was only marginaly offset by a 3,000 fall in vacancies for restaurants, cafe and bar staff, though the 134,000 jobs advertised by the hospitality industry remained almost double pre-pandemic levels, the ONS said.

Ministers were known to be concerned that many of the 11 million people who relied on the furlough scheme at some time during the pandemic would be unable to find work once it came to an end, but the continued fall in unemployment to 4.5% is likely to ease those fears.

However, analysts warned there was likely to be a return to higher rates of joblessness once the the 1 million people still on furlough when the scheme ended, many of them in older age groups, had lost the government’s job subsidy.

Yael Selfin, the chief UK economist at KPMG, said: “The recovery is testing the capacity of the economy to adjust to a new post-pandemic environment, a task made more difficult by the reduced availability of overseas workers.

“Last month’s ending of the furlough scheme could briefly raise the headline unemployment rate, which could average 4.9% for 2021 as a whole, representing a smaller impact than originally expected,” she added.

Julia Kermode, a founder of Nantwich-based small business IWork, said job shortages were so bad that “the UK’s army of temporary workers, the traditional back-stop for businesses in need, cannot meet the demand”.

“It’s incredibly competitive, with some firms opting to increase pay rates, but many businesses simply don’t have pots of money to throw at the problem,” she added.

In the three months to August, the employment rate increased by 0.5 percentage points to 75.3%, while the unemployment rate decreased by 0.4 percentage points to 4.5%.

Darren Morgan, the director of economic statistics at the ONS, said that during the summer the jobs market continued to recover from the effects of the coronavirus pandemic.

“However, the figures are still being affected by special factors that make it hard to read underlying trends,” Morgan added.Average weekly earnings the June-August period were 7.2% higher than in the equivalent three months of 2020, slowing from the previous reading of 8.3%. Excluding bonuses, earnings rose by 6.0%, also losing some momentum.

The ONS estimated the underlying pace of wage growth, taking into account how job losses during the coronavirus lockdowns affected predominantly lower-paid workers, stood between 4.1% and 5.6% for regular pay in nominal terms. That compared with regular pay growth of about 3% just before the pandemic began.

The chancellor, Rishi Sunak, said the government was committed to helping people find work after the expiry of the furlough scheme.

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Wages adjusted for inflation increased by between 1.5% and 3% after stripping out the distorting effects of the pandemic, the ONS said, though it was unclear how many employers had increased pay to attract staff or to make up for lost earnings during the pandemic.

Nevertheless, the rise in wages and the rise in employment to previous highs is expected to put pressure on the Bank of England to increase interest rates as early as December.

While many economists have cautioned that the underlying strength of the labour market is likely to remain unclear until next year when wages might have fallen back and unemployment rise again, financial markets have bet that BoE policymakers will increase rates by 0.15% before Christmas and 0.5% next year.

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