Introduction: UK jobless rate drops
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
Unemployment across the UK has dropped unexpectedly, as more people find work – or drop out of the labour market altogether.
The latest labour market data, just released, show that the UK unemployment rate has fallen to 4.2% in April-June – the last quarter before the general election in July.
Economist had expected a rise, from 4.4% to 4.5%.
But according to the Office for National Statistics, 51,000 fewer people were unemployed in the quarter, taking the total down to 1.435 million.
Employment picked up, by around 97,000 people, to 33.094 million.
But more people dropped out of the labour market altogether — often due to sickness, or caring responsibilities – lifting the economic inactivity rate to 22.2%.
The ONS also estimates that vacancies in the UK decreased in May to July 2024 by 26,000 on the quarter, to 884,000.
ONS director of economic statistics Liz McKeown says:
“There was a fall in the unemployment rate, which is now lower than a year ago. Meanwhile, there was a modest increase in both the total numbers of people in employment and the number of employees on payroll in the latest quarter.
“However, the medium-term picture remains somewhat subdued with the employment rate still lower than a year ago and the growth rate in the number of payrolled employees having slowed over the year.
“The number of job vacancies continues to decline, although the total number remains above pre-pandemic levels.”
The data kicks off a busy few days for UK economic data – it’s inflation tomorrow, then the first estimate of UK GDP for April-June on Thursday, and finally retail sales on Friday morning.
The agenda
-
7am BST: UK labour market data
-
8am BST: Kantar index of UK supermarket inflation
-
10am BST: IEA monthly oil market report
-
10am BST: ZEW index of eurozone economic confidence
-
1.30pm BST: US PPI index of producer price inflation
Key events
What will today’s UK jobs data mean for interest rates?
Rob Morgan, chief investment analyst at wealth manager Charles Stanley, says the Bank of England won’t be in a rush to lower rates again, following the cut earlier this month, after seeing basic pay rose by 5.4% in April-June.
Morgan says:
Today’s job numbers have all but ended hopes of a further interest rate cut for a few months. Wage inflation is a key number to help the BoE assess how quickly it should cut interest rates as it’s a significant component of services sector prices.
While goods inflation has been largely contained for the time being, services inflation continues to run hot, driven by higher wages. An employment market taking a long time to balance strengthens the case of the MPC hawks who want to wait for more evidence before they reduce rates any further.
ING Developed Markets Economist, James Smith, argues that the data will “do little” to shift the debate among BoE policymakers.
Smith explains:
In the short term, we think the stickiness in wage growth will keep the Bank moving cautiously on rate cuts.
But assuming there is further progress on both that and services inflation over the next few months, we think the Bank will accelerate the pace of cuts beyond November. We expect Bank Rate to fall to 3.25% by this time next year.”
This morning, the money markets indicate there’s a 64.5% chance that the Bank will leave interest rates on hold in September, and a 35.5% chance of a cut.
Today’s jobs report shows an extra 350,000 people became ‘economically inactive’ over the last year.
That means they were neither working (ie, in employment) or out of work and looking for a job (unemployed).
On a seasonally-unadjusted basis, the ONS reports there were 9.516m adults, aged 16-64, who were economically inactive.
Of this total, 2.659m were students, 1.741m were looking after family, 228,000 were temporarily sick and 2.8m were long-term sick.
There were 27,000 ‘discouraged workers’, who were not looking for work because they believed none was available, and 1.069m were retired.
Dr Helen Gray, chief economist of Learning and Work Institute, says:
Compared with the period immediately prior to the pandemic (December 2019 to February 2020), 859,000 more people aged 16 to 64 were economically inactive in the most recent quarter. 1.8 million people who are economically inactive want a job.
In April to June 2024, only just over half (53.0%) of all people of working age with a disability were employed, compared with 81.6% of those without a disability. Yet only 1-in-10 out-of-work people with a disability get help to find work each year.
To achieve the government’s ambition of an 80% employment rate, it will be necessary to extend employment support to a greater proportion of those who want to work.
Vacancies across the UK economy have now fallen for more than two years running.
Job openings surged in 2021 and early 2022, as the economy reopened after Covid-19 restrictions, peaking at over 1.3m in March-May 2022 as companies scrambled to find staff.
Today, the ONS reports that vacancy numbers decreased in May to July 2024 for the 25th time in a row, to to 884,000. That’s still above the pre-Covid levels, though.
UK real wage growth is ‘running out of steam’, fears Hannah Slaughter, senior economist at the Resolution Foundation:
“Workers’ pay packets continue to grow coming out of the cost-of-living crisis, but the recent strong real wage growth is running out of steam as productivity stagnates and the jobs market cools.
Slaughter also warns that problems collecting reliable data make it hard to see the true picture of the labour market:
“Official data is likely to be under-estimating the real level of employment in the UK, which could be close to a record high. This data failure is blind-siding monetary policy makers as they weigh up what to do on interest rates.”
The slowdown in pay growth in April to June is a “big win” for the Bank of England, says Thomas Pugh, economist at leading audit, tax and consulting firm RSM UK.
Pugh says the Bank’s monetary policy committee (MPC) will welcome the slowdown in wage growth in the private sector (workers may not agree, of course!).
He explains:
Regular private sector pay growth has dropped from 5.6% to 5.2% in June, that’s only a fraction above the MPC forecast of 5.1%. Wage growth should continue to trend down over the rest of this year as 2% inflation is factored into pay settlements.
“If wage growth does continue to fall over the rest of this year, it would give the MPC ample cover to cut rates again towards the end of the year, probably in November, and then be more aggressive in its rate cutting cycle in 2025, so we currently have four cuts pencilled in for next year.
“Just as importantly for households, real wages grew by 2.4%. That, combined with rising consumer confidence, should give a boost to consumer spending in the second half of this year, helping a consumer spending driven recovery.”
UK grocery inflation rises
Julia Kollewe
Newsflash: UK grocery inflation has risen for the first time since March last year, returning to the rate seen before the start of the cost of living crisis.
Supermarket prices were 1.8% higher than a year ago in the four weeks to 4 August, up slightly from 1.6% in July, according to retail analysts Kantar. This rise comes after 17 months of easing inflation from a peak of 17.5% to its lowest point since September 2021 last month.
There is a mixed picture on supermarket shelves, with prices rising across 182 product categories while the cost of 89 others dropped. Kitchen towels and baked beans are 7% and 5% cheaper respectively than this time last year.
Fraser McKevitt, head of retail and consumer insight at Kantar, said:
“Having reached its lowest rate in almost three years in July, August saw inflation nudge up again slightly. While this is noticeable following 17 straight months of falling rates, it actually marks a return to the average levels seen in the five years before the start of the cost of living crisis.
“With this kind of pricing spread, shoppers will find that the type of product they’re putting in their baskets will really dictate how much they pay.”
Pound hits one-week high after UK jobs report
Sterling is rallying in early trading, as traders react to the drop in UK unemployment.
The pound has gained almost half a cent, or 0.33%, this morning to reach $1.2809, the highest since 5 August.
Political reaction
Chancellor Rachel Reeves says there is “more to do in supporting people into employment”, after today’s jobs data showed another rise in people classed as economically inactive.
Reeves says:
“Today’s figures show there is more to do in supporting people into employment because if you can work, you should work.
“This will be part of my Budget later in the year where I will be making difficult decisions on spending, welfare and tax to fix the foundations of our economy so we can rebuild Britain and make every part of our country better-off.”
Work and Pensions Secretary, Liz Kendall MP, says the Labour government will help people get back to work:
“This is yet more evidence of the dire inheritance we face, with millions of people denied the support they need to get work and get on at work, harming their opportunities and holding back growth.
“This government will deliver the change the country is crying out for by making work pay, transforming skills, overhauling jobcentres and giving local areas the power they need to drive jobs and growth.”
An estimated 100,000 working days were lost because of labour disputes across the UK in June 2024, the ONS reports.
The majority of the strikes were in the health and social work sector, with junior doctors starting a five-day strike on 27 June.
Premier Miton: UK economy is performing well
There’s nothing in today’s UK unemployment report to spook the markets, suggest Neil Birrell, chief investment officer at Premier Miton Investors:
“It was weak US jobs data that sent markets into a tailspin, but there is no need to worry about that in the UK. The labour market is stronger than expected, with wage growth pretty much in line.
The UK economy is performing well, which will be a boost to the new government, but there probably isn’t enough in these numbers to change Bank of England policy for now.”
Across the economy, the finance and business services sector saw the largest annual regular growth rate at 6.2%.
Pay grew slowest in the construction sector, at 3.5%.
Public sector pay growth outpaces private sector
That NHS one-off bonus from June 2023 helped public sector pay to grow faster than in the private sector, in April-June.
The Office for National Statistics reports that annual average regular earnings growth for the public sector “remains strong” at 6.0% in April-June, down from 6.4% in the previous quarter.
Private sector pay growth slowed to 5.2% – the lowest since March to May 2022 (when it was 5.1%).
UK wage growth hits lowest rate in two years
UK wage growth slowed in the quarter – but earnings kept rising faster than inflation.
The ONS reports that regular pay (excluding bonuses) rose by 5.4% in April to June. That’s the lowest increase since May to July 2022 (when it was 5.2%).
Growth in total pay (including bonuses) slowed more sharply, to 4.5% (from 5.7% a month ago). However, this data is distorted by one-off bonus payments made to NHS staff in June 2023.
If you adjust for CPI inflation, regular real pay rose by 3.2% on the year, the same as the previous three-month period. It was last higher in June to August 2021, when it was 3.4%.
Total real pay rose by 2.2% on the year in April to June.
The slowdown in wage growth could encourage the Bank of England to cut interest rates twice more before Christmas, suggests Capital Economics.
They told clients:
The further easing in wage growth will be welcomed by the Bank of England as a sign that labour market conditions are continuing to cool. This lends some support to our forecast that the Bank of England will press ahead with two more 25bps interest rate cuts later this year.
Introduction: UK jobless rate drops
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
Unemployment across the UK has dropped unexpectedly, as more people find work – or drop out of the labour market altogether.
The latest labour market data, just released, show that the UK unemployment rate has fallen to 4.2% in April-June – the last quarter before the general election in July.
Economist had expected a rise, from 4.4% to 4.5%.
But according to the Office for National Statistics, 51,000 fewer people were unemployed in the quarter, taking the total down to 1.435 million.
Employment picked up, by around 97,000 people, to 33.094 million.
But more people dropped out of the labour market altogether — often due to sickness, or caring responsibilities – lifting the economic inactivity rate to 22.2%.
The ONS also estimates that vacancies in the UK decreased in May to July 2024 by 26,000 on the quarter, to 884,000.
ONS director of economic statistics Liz McKeown says:
“There was a fall in the unemployment rate, which is now lower than a year ago. Meanwhile, there was a modest increase in both the total numbers of people in employment and the number of employees on payroll in the latest quarter.
“However, the medium-term picture remains somewhat subdued with the employment rate still lower than a year ago and the growth rate in the number of payrolled employees having slowed over the year.
“The number of job vacancies continues to decline, although the total number remains above pre-pandemic levels.”
The data kicks off a busy few days for UK economic data – it’s inflation tomorrow, then the first estimate of UK GDP for April-June on Thursday, and finally retail sales on Friday morning.
The agenda
-
7am BST: UK labour market data
-
8am BST: Kantar index of UK supermarket inflation
-
10am BST: IEA monthly oil market report
-
10am BST: ZEW index of eurozone economic confidence
-
1.30pm BST: US PPI index of producer price inflation