Headline unemployment fall is good news, but underlying picture remains grim

The ‘recovery’ in the labour market over the most recent quarter has been characterised by part-time work and slowing wage growth; this is not good news.

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The headline figures from today’s Labour Market Statistics (pdf) are certainly good news, unemployment (on the broad International Labor Organization measure) fell by 35,000 whilst employment rose by 53,000.

Job-Centre-PlusBut a glance beneath the headlines reveals some worrying signs of continuing weakness in the labour market:

• The claimant count measure of unemployment (which only counts those actually claiming Jobseeker’s Allowance) rose by 3,600 in March 2012 to 1.61m, its highest since October 2009 and up 145,200 over the past year;

• Youth unemployment remained above the one million mark and the number of long term unemployed people rose by 38,000 on the quarter;

• The rise in employment was driven by a rise in part-time work, with the number of people in full-time work down by 27,000;

• There was another rise in ‘under-employment’ with an additional 89,000 people working part-time because they cannot find a full-time job;

• A record 1,400,000 people are now in this position, whilst 627,000 are currently on short term contracts but want a permanent one.

In other words the ‘recovery’ in the jobs market is being driven by part-time work and precarious employment rather than full-time, permanent positions.

There was even grimmer news on the wages front. As Graph 1 shows, total pay growth fell to just 1.1%, the weakest reading in 20 months. Normally one would expect rising employment to be accompanied by a pick-up in wage growth as the demand for labour increased.

The part-time and precarious nature of the current recovery means this is not happening. The slowing of pay growth suggests a lot of slack remains in the labour market.

Graph 1:

Earnings-inflation-and-real-wages-2010-2012
The falls in inflation since its peak last autumn should be providing a boost to household incomes and supporting consumer spending, but the slowing of wage growth means real wages (nominal earnings minus inflation) continue to fall.

Since peaking at 5.6% in September last year RPI fell to 3.7% in February, a drop of 1.9%. However during the same period earnings growth fell from 2.3% to 1.1%. So whilst real wages were falling at an annual rate of 3.3% in September they are now falling at a pace of 2.6%, better but still grim news for hard pressed households.

The large fall in inflation is not feeding through into real incomes, which face additional pressures from the changes to the tax credit system.

 


See also:

We need a firm limit on the time we are prepared to tolerate anyone being unemployed 17 Apr 2012

Latest labour market stats are encouraging, but we should remain cautious 14 Mar 2012

Encouraging news on jobs, but far too early to call a labour market recovery 7 Mar 2012


 

It is certainly good news that unemployment fell in the most recent quarter but the headline figures don’t tell the whole story. The ‘recovery’ in the labour market over the most recent quarter has been characterised by part-time work and slowing wage growth; by any reasonable measure this isn’t cause for celebration.

 


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27 Responses to “Headline unemployment fall is good news, but underlying picture remains grim”

  1. Mr. Sensible

    The unemployment statistics always come across as complex, but it will be interesting to see where the government goes next.

  2. BevR

    RT @leftfootfwd: Headline unemployment fall is good news, but underlying picture remains grim http://t.co/bkrvZ8ig

  3. Richard Exell

    RT @DuncanWeldon – the unemployment and employment figures are no great cause for celebration: http://t.co/g59bpEfA

  4. Barbara Keeley

    @DuncanWeldon: Employment picture "grim": Number in f/t work down 27k, 89k more in p/t work, 627k on short contracts – http://t.co/vGQsiEUQ

  5. Rick

    A part-time & precarious ‘recovery’ – me at @leftfootfwd on today’s employment stats. http://t.co/4UeJqo4P

Comments are closed.