Labour Market Data Set To Worsen In Coming Months

 | Sep 17, 2020 10:06

  • Official data show redundancies growing at the fastest rate since 2009
  • Unemployment rises to 1.4 million, jobless rate up to 4.1%, but numbers set to rise sharply
  • Job vacancies rise but demand for staff remains subdued, leading to net fall in employment
  • The latest official data signalled a deteriorating labour market up to July, with redundancies rising at the sharpest rate since 2009 as job losses linked to the COVID-19 pandemic mounted. Unemployment rose and workforce jobs fell sharply. However, more timely survey data suggest that even these downbeat official data capture only part of the labour market deterioration that has taken place so far.

    Employment numbers set to worsen

    Data from the Office for National Statistics' Labour Force Survey showed the number of workforce employee jobs fell by 227,000 over the three months to June, the highest since the 233,000 decline registered at the height of the global financial crisis in late-2008.

    While in itself a worrying statistic, the near quarter of a million drop in workforce jobs is likely to be overshadowed by what's to come. Timelier IHS Markit/CIPS PMI survey data are particularly useful as an advance guide to the official statistics. The all sector PMI employment index, covering manufacturing, services and construction, fell to an all-time low of 26.3 at the height of the COVID-19 lockdown in April, indicating a rate of job losses greatly exceeding that seen at the height of the global financial crisis, when the same index merely fell to 37.3.

    Historical comparisons indicate that the April low of the PMI was commensurate with jobs being lost at a quarterly rate of over 400,000. While the PMI index had since risen between May and July, it remained firmly in territory indicative of steep job losses, with the rate of decline even accelerating again in August.

    Experimental data based on tax records meanwhile show that the number of employees on firms' payrolls was almost 700,000 lower in August than before the lockdown in March, which tallies much more closely with the PMI signal than the Labour Force Survey data, and therefore suggests the latter may worsen in coming months as the official employment data catch up with the gloomier signals from the PMI and tax records.