Mixed UK labor market signals leave BoE on rate cut alert
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[May 14, 2024] By
Suban Abdulla
LONDON (Reuters) - British wages grew by more than expected, according
to data published on Tuesday, but other figures suggested the labor
market is losing some of its inflationary heat, keeping the Bank of
England on alert about when to cut interest rates.
Regular wages, excluding bonuses, rose by 6.0% in the first three months
of 2024 compared with the same period in 2023.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast growth of 5.9%, slowing from
6.0% in the three months to February.
BoE Chief Economist Huw Pill said the labor market remained tight by
historical standards but the central bank could consider cutting rates
over the summer.
Sterling weakened after Pill's comments, but investors kept their bets
on future BoE rate cuts largely unchanged with the chance of a first
reduction in June priced at around 50-50.
The Office for National Statistics said total pay, which includes more
volatile bonus payments, rose by 5.7%, above economists' expectations of
5.5%.
Private sector regular pay, a key metric for the BoE, eased slightly to
5.9%, a touch below the BoE's most recent forecast.
Rob Wood, chief UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said there were
other signs that the pressure on wages was on course to ease.
"Much as we have concerns over the jobs data, the labor market keeps
gradually easing, and they give the Monetary Policy Committee a hook to
hang a June rate cut on," Wood said.
Other analysts suggested a longer wait.
Jack Kennedy, senior economist at jobs platform Indeed, said the
hotter-than-expected wage data "casts doubt on a June interest rate cut
and will support the case for policymakers waiting for more evidence."
Finance minister Jeremy Hunt, who is trying to help Prime Minister Rishi
Sunak rein in the opposition Labor Party's opinion poll lead before an
election this year, pointed to how wages were outstripping inflation.
"This is the 10th month in a row that wages have risen faster than
inflation which will help with the cost of living pressures on
families," Hunt said in a statement.
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People walk over London Bridge looking at a view of Tower Bridge in
the City of London financial district in London, Britain, October
25, 2023. REUTERS/ Susannah Ireland/Files
RATE CUT DEBATE
The BoE last week signaled that it could start cutting rates from
their current 16-year high of 5.25% as early as its meeting next
month.
Tuesday's figures were the first of two official labor market data
releases before the central bank's June 20 monetary policy
announcement.
Despite the stubbornly strong pay growth, there were signs that
Britain's labor market was cooling.
The ONS said the unemployment rate rose to 4.3%, its highest since
the three months to July 2023, although it cautioned that the survey
from which the jobless rate is calculated is still being overhauled.
Vacancies fell for the 22nd time in a row in the three months to
April, dropping by 26,000 from the November-to-January period.
Roisin Currie, CEO of baker and fast food retailer Greggs which
employs 32,000 people, told Reuters that vacancy numbers were the
lowest they have been for two years. But she still expected the
labor market to remain tough for employers "for at least another
couple of years."
An increase in Britain's minimum wage, which rose by 9.8% to 11.44
pounds ($14.32) an hour last month, has put pressure on some
employers to reduce hiring or increase prices.
Hunt has cut social security contributions for workers and is
tightening welfare to try to get more people into employment.
However, Britain's inactivity rate - measuring people not in work
and not looking for employment - rose to 22.1%, close to its highest
since mid-2022.
($1 = 0.7989 pounds)
(Reporting by Suban Abdulla, additional reporting by James Davey;
Editing by William Schomberg, Kate Holton and Christina Fincher)
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