Unemployment reaches record low in UK as labour shortage hits companies

Britain's unemployment rate has tumbled to its lowest level since 1975 at 4.2 per cent

William Schomberg  |  LONDON 

The number of people recruited for permanent jobs in Britain grew at its slowest pace in nine months in July, reflecting record low and a shortage of from the European Union, a recruiters' body said on Wednesday.

A monthly survey by the (REC) showed there was no lack of appetite for hiring among employers, as the number of vacancies grew at the fastest pace since November 2017.

Britain's rate has tumbled to its lowest level since 1975 at 4.2 per cent and many employers have reported a shortage of EU migrants available for work since the Brexit vote in June 2016.

An REC said companies were continuing to flag the problem of fewer EU candidates for jobs in Britain.

data has shown that the number of EU immigrants to Britain fell to a five-year low last year.

The REC survey showed rising pay for newly hired permanent staff, albeit to a lesser extent than in previous months.

"With our data showing starting salaries continuing to rise, the latest government figures suggest that we are finally seeing the effects of a tighter labour market feed through to pay," Sophie Wingfield, at REC, said.

Employers picked up the pace of hiring of temporary workers and their pay rose too, REC said.

The said last week it expected pay growth for the workforce as a whole to increase gradually over the next three years as Britain's operates close to full capacity. This risk of the overheating was why it raised borrowing costs for only the second time since the global financial crisis.

First Published: Wed, August 08 2018. 09:19 IST