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Unemployment rises as wages fail to keep pace with price rises

17 Jan 2023 3 minute read
Photo by Helen Cobain, licensed under CC BY 2.0

The proportion of working-age people who were unemployed in the UK rose in the three months to November, while wages fell further behind soaring prices than at almost any point since records began, new figures show.

The unemployment rate rose to 3.7% over the period, from 3.5% in the previous quarter, the Office for National Statistics said on Tuesday.

The change was driven largely by an increase in people looking for work, as the proportion of people in employment remained unchanged during the period.

Those who are not in employment or looking for work do not count towards these figures.

ONS director of economic statistics Darren Morgan said: “In the most recent three months, employment levels were largely unchanged on the previous three months.

“However, unemployment rose, driven by more young people who have only recently become unemployed, meaning overall there was a small increase in people actively engaged in the jobs market, whether working or looking for work.”

The proportion of those considered “economically inactive” dropped by 0.1 percentage point to 21.5%, largely driven by 16 to 24-year-olds and those aged 50 to 64.

It comes as people try to find ways to deal with the ballooning cost of living.

Soaring prices

But being in a job has not helped workers escape from soaring prices, despite major pay rises for private-sector employees.

Pay rose by 6.4% in the three months – 7.2% in the private sector and 3.3% for public sector workers – yet failed to keep up with prices.

In real terms, which means that pay rises are adjusted for inflation, pay dropped by 2.6%.

This is better than the 3% fall seen in April to June last year, but remains one of the worst falls since records began in 2001.

“The real value of people’s pay continues to fall, with prices still rising faster than earnings. This remains amongst the fastest drops in regular earnings since records began,” Mr Morgan said.

To try to force bigger rises, many workers abandoned their workplaces to strike in November. The 467,000 working days lost to labour disputes was the highest since November 2011.

Inflation

Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt said: “The single best way to help people’s wages go further is to stick to our plan to halve inflation this year.

“We must not do anything that risks permanently embedding high prices into our economy, which will only prolong the pain for everyone.”

Shadow work and pensions secretary Jonathan Ashworth said: “Today’s figures show the Tories are totally bereft of ideas when it comes to tackling the cost-of-living crisis, growing the economy and supporting people into work.

“Real wages are plummeting, almost two-and-a-half million people are out of work because of sickness, and far too many people – especially the over-50s – aren’t getting the support they need to either stay in work or to go back to work.”


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Hywel
Hywel
1 year ago

Perhaps some of the “registered disabled because of ‘anxiety’” amongst the astonishing ‘27% of the Welsh population are disabled’ we read here the other day, may have decided they are, actually, able to work and be economically active.

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
1 year ago

Taking about jobs; which occupation, member of the government or member of the Met, has the larger percentage of offenders in their midst…

hdavies15
hdavies15
1 year ago

Not really surprising that the level of unemployment has risen given the shambles created by the clique in government and the spivs running industries and services that have driven up the cost of everything to the point where spending patterns are being disrupted worse than any time in last 12-13 years. The industries shedding staff are generally being crucified by a combination of inflated input costs – like energy which influences virtually everything – and the absence of any kind of rational post Brexit international trade caused by Tory exceptionalism not producing the results they expected but didn’t work diligently… Read more »

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