Duncan Wheldon argues that even the mediocre employment figures released today STILL overstate the positive news
The latest Labour market statistics gave a mixed picture of the state of the jobs market.
The unemployment rose by 0.1 per cent on the quarter (as Will Straw has noted it is now higher than the US for the first time since the Great recession began), youth unemployment continued to climb and pay growth remains well below inflation.
However the headline figure of the number of people in employment rose by 60,000 on the quarter, something the government has been quick to hail as a sign that the labour market might be stabilising.
Whilst any rise in employment is obviously to be welcomed, looking in the data in more detail provides reasons to be cautious.
Yesterday the TUC warned about rising under-employment. In the UK we tend to view unemployment as a very black and white issue – people are either in work or out of it. In reality there are many shades of grey in between, people who whilst not unemployed don’t have all of the work they want to be doing.
One way of measuring under-employment is add together all of those workers in part-time jobs who say they want a full-time position but can’t find one and all of those in temporary positions who want a permanent one. Both of these measures rose in today’s data as the chart below makes clear:
The number of under-employed workers rose by 103,000 in the last quarter of 2011, more than explaining the 60,000 rise in employment. It now stands at 1,948,000, the highest number since the records began in 1992. Precarious work is on the rise in the UK with the number of people under-employed having nearly doubled since the recession began in 2008.
In 2011 the number of workers under-employed grew by 181,000 whilst the overall number of people in employment grew by just 7,000. In other words a large rise in under-employment has massaged the labour market statistics and may have made the numbers appear stronger than they actually are.
Whilst being in some sort of work is preferable to being unemployed the long term impact on workers can be severe. People with an employment history of working multiple temporary contracts and part-time jobs can find it harder to gain a full-time position in the future through no fault of their own.
When one takes under-employment into account the underlying performance of the UK labour market over 2011 may be a lot weaker than the headline figures suggest.
See also:
• Growth in jobs probably not enough to bring down unemployment – Richard Exell, February 8th 2012
• Ken stays ahead as Boris doubles-down on blaming young people for youth unemployment – Alex Hern, January 23rd 2012
• “The PM is wrong: the labour market is very weak” – Richard Exell, January 18th 2012
• Employment agencies: Jobs picture is even worse than you might imagine – Richard Exell, January 11th 2012
• Unemployment hits 17-year high – record number of young people out of work – Shamik Das, October 12th 2011
36 Responses to “Employment figures mask the rise in under-employment”
Sue Bent
Employment figures mask the rise in under-employment http://t.co/vN8lecMa via @leftfootfwd
Marzia Gitto
Employment figures mask the rise in under-employment http://t.co/vN8lecMa via @leftfootfwd
Newsbot9
You mean wages would fall even faster and you’d manage to get 0.01% more value on the stock portfolio, even though five years down the line other costs will eclipse the “savings” the government is making right now.
Realistically, 10 hours and less a week isn’t a proper job, but hey, it makes your idioticy look good in the figures. Shame about reality.
Jobcentre Plus needs radical and urgent reform to bring down unemployment | Left Foot Forward
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Tony27nine
Duncan, an interesting article.
I appreciate that you have to satisfy your union paymasters by pandering to the usual model of bashing the rich dressed up as fighting for the rights of the poor. I’d really like to see you, just for a change stop trying to prove everyone else wrong (at least they’re trying) and come up with some alternative solutions.
My sense is that the more often the unions, in the guise of Mssrs Brogan and McCluskey, open their mouths the more people are starting to realise that they’re not particularly intelligent, don’t have anything constructive to offer, and actually are a bit out of touch. The average working class joe doesn’t mind people getting rewarded for hard work. Most don’t think that anyone earning enough to buy a Rolls Royce should be publicly whipped provided they’ve worked hard, contributed their share and created a few jobs on the way – look at how people view Branson, Sugar and Mone…. There will always be a disparity between people’s income. Some are born wealthy, some attractive, some intelligent. Some are lucky and win fortunes – get over it. Start to look at the real problems and come up with some workable solutions and then I, and others, might be inclined to take you seriously.