UK jobs hit record high as Bank of England weighs up rate hike
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[October 12, 2021] By
William Schomberg and Andy Bruce
LONDON (Reuters) -British employers
increased their payrolls to a record high in September, shortly before
the end of the government's wage subsidies scheme, potentially
encouraging the Bank of England's progress towards a first post-pandemic
interest rate hike.
The number of workers on companies' books rose by the most on record in
data going back to 2014, up by 207,000 from August.
Employers turned to recruitment agencies to find staff and hotel and
food firms created jobs as they recovered from COVID-19 lockdowns.
Separate official data published on Tuesday showed the unemployment rate
edged down to 4.5% in the three months to August from 4.6% in the
May-July period, as expected by economists in a Reuters poll.
The BoE is gearing up to become the first major central bank to raise
rates since the coronavirus crisis struck. Inflation is heading towards
4% or higher -- above its 2% target.
But the BoE is watching to see how many people became unemployed after
the end of the furlough programme that subsidised wages to keep people
employed during the pandemic.
About 1 million people are likely to have been on the scheme when it
ended on Sept. 30, according to an estimate by the Resolution Foundation
think tank.
Hussain Mehdi, macro and investment strategist at HSBC Asset Management,
said the data left open the possibility of a BoE rate increase before
the end of the year.
"A decent October jobs report could open the door to a hike as soon as
the December meeting," he said.
The BoE is also monitoring pay growth as it tries to gauge how
persistent a recent jump in inflation is likely to be.
Average weekly earnings in the June-August period were 7.2% higher than
in the same three months of 2020, slowing from the previous reading of
8.3%.
Excluding bonuses, earnings rose by 6.0%, also losing some momentum.
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A woman walks past an employment agency "ExtraStaff" in North
London, amid the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in
London, Britain June 16, 2020. REUTERS/John Sibley/File Photo
The ONS estimated the underlying pace of wage growth, taking into account how
job losses during the lockdowns affected predominantly lower-paid workers, was
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 hit.
SHORTAGE OF JOB CANDIDATES
A record-high level of vacancies pointed to a shortage of candidates for jobs
after the pandemic and Britain's post-Brexit controls on workers from the
European Union which has made it harder for some employers to find staff. A
shortage of fuel tanker drivers led to the supply of petrol and diesel being
disrupted this month.
But there were still signs of caution on the part of employers, who hired many
more part-time workers than full-time staff in the three months to August.
The Resolution Foundation said the widest measure of economic activity – hours
worked – remained 2.7% down on pre-pandemic levels, but the gap was likely to be
closed in next month's data.
"Though wage growth looks almost unbelievably strong right now, there are big
questions over whether it will remain strong enough over the coming months to
prevent real wages from falling this winter," said Nye Cominetti, a Resolution
Foundation economist.
(Reporting by William Schomberg and Andy Bruce, Editing by Paul Sandle, Andrew
Heavens and Timothy Heritage)
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