• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Analysis-End of furlough brings uncertainty for UK jobs and economy

September 28, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

September 28, 2021

By David Milliken

LONDON (Reuters) – More than a million British workers face an uncertain future this week as the UK becomes the world’s first big economy to wind up its COVID-19 jobs support scheme.

The programme, which at its peak paid a third of employees to stay at home, cost more than 68 billion pounds ($93 billion) – the most expensive single piece of UK economic support during the pandemic.

It also marked a sharp shift in policy in Britain where unemployment benefits are low by European standards.

“I think it’s been an absolute lifesaver … and was exactly what the government needed to put in,” said Sabby Gill, chief executive of human resources software firm Thomas International, which furloughed staff until the start of this year.

The approach to pandemic job support in Britain and elsewhere in Europe differed from the United States, which increased unemployment benefits a lot but made much less effort to preserve the link between employers and staff.

Other European countries with more tradition of short-time working programmes such as Germany are keeping furlough support longer, at least for harder-hit sectors.

But with employers reporting record-high job vacancies – and acute shortages of workers such as truck drivers – most observers think Britain is right to end its programme on Sept. 30.

“Now we need to start focusing more on active measures to help people take up the jobs that are available, rather than passive measures that pay people not to work,” said Tony Wilson, director of the Institute for Employment Studies think tank.

However, the short-term impact of the scheme’s end on unemployment and the broader economy is unclear.

Last week the Bank of England called it a key source of uncertainty for its thinking on when to raise interest rates, and Governor Andrew Bailey said in a speech on Monday that the situation posed a puzzle for central bankers.

Policymakers had a “range of views” on the likely path for unemployment and wanted to wait for data on the impact of the scheme’s expiry, minutes of their September meeting showed.

Official data shows 1.56 million jobs were fully or partly on furlough at the end of July, down from a peak of 8.86 million in May 2020 shortly after the programme launched. Of those, just over half were fully furloughed, while the remainder had staff working some of their pre-pandemic hours.

A more timely – but more approximate – survey of employers by the Office for National Statistics suggests there was no big fall in total furlough numbers over August with between 0.3 and 0.8 million people completely off work.

Wilson thinks the number of people who will find themselves newly unemployed on Oct. 1 is at the bottom end of this range, in part because some will have been working side jobs while on furlough, while others have dropped out of the labour market.

Britain’s unemployment rate was 4.6% in the three months to July, up from 4.0% before the pandemic. But the ‘inactivity rate’ – measuring working-age people who are studying full-time, long-term sick, caring for family or have given up hunting for work – has risen more to 21.1% from 20.2% before.

INFLATION RISK

Even if the jobless rate rises, that would not necessarily stop the BoE raising interest rates early next year.

If the newly unemployed lack skills to work in areas most in need of more staff – from plucking a turkey to programming a computer – then supply-chain bottlenecks risk pushing up inflation over the medium term.

“This could feel a lot more like the early 2000s – when there was a strong recovery … and really significant labour shortages driving up wages and inflation – than the early 2010s when the opposite was happening,” Wilson said.

Similar to the early 2000s, and unlike the 2010s, British firms cannot easily employ workers from poorer parts of eastern Europe, due to post-Brexit visa rules.

Employers with hard-to-fill tech roles needed to be less picky about new recruits, said Bev White, chief executive of recruitment consultancy Harvey Nash.

“Not all of those jobs require you to be a rocket scientist,” and roles such as chatbot managers only required motivation and willingness to learn something new, she said.

Not every economist thinks the bottlenecks will last. Slack in the job market will weigh on wages and inflation, as it did after the global financial crisis, some say.

“We expect underemployment to rise sharply as people return to their former employers but work fewer hours than they would like,” said Samuel Tombs of Pantheon Macroeconomics, who expects the jobless rate to peak at 5.0%.

LONGER-TERM LESSONS

Whether the furlough programme should reappear during future economic downturns in Britain is up for debate.

Britain’s budget deficit shot up more than most advanced economies last year to its highest since World War Two, and finance minister Rishi Sunak has announced big increases to payroll taxes to fund greater health and social care spending.

For now, targeted support for sectors still hurting from the pandemic, such as aviation, is what is needed, the Confederation of British Industry’s deputy chief economist, Anna Leach, said.

Britain’s Trades Union Congress would like furlough to become a permanent part of the landscape, allowing businesses to delay lay-offs and give scope for retraining.

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said the government should keep an open mind, especially as general unemployment benefits in Britain are low.

In 2019, a British person on an average salary who became unemployed for three months would have received 34% of their previous income in benefits, compared with 68% in France, 59% in Germany and 40% in the United States, OECD data shows.

Fears that furlough would keep workers tied to employers with weak long-term prospects appeared misplaced, based on early evidence including OECD studies looking at Britain, Australia and New Zealand last year.

“I’d say it has worked very well,” OECD senior economist Alexander Hijzen said. “It definitely should be part of the toolkit that governments have to deal with other economic crises, not just pandemics.”

($1 = 0.7311 pounds)

(Additional reporting by Andy Bruce; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Source Link Analysis-End of furlough brings uncertainty for UK jobs and economy

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. Motor racing – Tsunoda puts his chances of staying in F1 at 50-50
  2. Daily Crunch: 8 Indian banks launch Account Aggregator to centralize consumers’ financial data
  3. New Democrats’ Singh looks to dance his way to role as Canada’s kingmaker
  4. EA delays Battlefield 2042 launch to November 19

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • Do Animals Fall For Magic Tricks? Watch A Devastated Squirrel Monkey Prove That Yes, They Do
  • Google’s CEO Wants AI Data Centers In Space In 2027. There Is One Massive Problem
  • Live Seven-Arm Octopus Spotted In The Deep Sea – Only The Fourth Time It’s Been Seen In 40 Years
  • Uranus May Not Be So Weird After All – Voyager Just Caught It During An Unusual Gust Of Wind
  • “Exceptional” 5.5-Million-Light-Year-Long Cosmic Structure Appears To Be Rotating, Challenging Current Models Of The Universe
  • How A Mystery Volcano Sparked The Black Death In The 14th Century
  • A Strange New Species Of Bird Has Worrying Similarities To The Doomed Dodo
  • Darkest Fabric Ever Made – Inspired By Birds-Of-Paradise – Creates The Ultimate Little Black Dress
  • This Guy’s Head Was Bitten By A Lion 6,000 Years Ago – But He Survived
  • 12 Former FDA Heads Call Out FDA’s Leaked Memo Claiming COVID-19 Vaccines Killed Children In Bid To Change Policy
  • Hidden Features In Our Galaxy Discovered By Studying The Milky Way From The Inside Out
  • Why Does My Belly Button Smell?
  • 2,500-Year-Old Chronicle Is Oldest Known Record Of A Total Solar Eclipse And Reveals Some Surprises
  • RIP Claude: San Francisco’s Iconic Albino Alligator Dies Aged 30
  • Nitrous Oxide: Inhaling “Laughing Gas” Could Be Surprisingly Effective For Treating Severe Depression
  • JWST Discovers A Milky Way-Like Spiral Galaxy Where It Shouldn’t Exist
  • World’s Largest Dinosaur Tracksite Has At Least 16,600 Footprints And Sets Many World Records
  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Will Make Its Closest Approach To Earth This Month, Just 270 Million Kilometers Away
  • How Does Time Pass On Mars? For The First Time, We Have A Precise Answer
  • Is This How The Voynich Manuscript Was Made? A New Cipher Offers Fascinating Clues
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version