UK wage growth slows and unemployment rate rises as companies react to Iran war – business live

Key events

‘Real wages on the cusp of shrinking for fourth time since financial crisis’ – thinktank

Real wages are on the cusp of shrinking for the fourth time in less than two decades, the Resolution Foundation has warned.

The latest ONS data shows February’s fall in unemployment was a blip. A sharp rise in March – to 5.5% in the single-month data, the highest since 2015 – returned unemployment to 5% over the first three months of the year. Early indications suggest further bad news in April, with payrolled employment falling by 100,000 on the month (although initial April estimates are always subject to large revisions).

The picture on pay packets is even bleaker. Wage growth has continued to weaken in cash terms and was only able to match – rather than outpace – inflation in March. With the war set to push up inflation over the coming months, pay packets are set to start shrinking in real terms.

The foundation notes that this stuttering pay performance since 2008 has left average weekly earnings £278 below their pre-financial crisis levels.

The one silver lining is that the weak state of the labour market means that second-round effects from rising inflation are likely to be smaller than they were following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, giving the Bank of England pause for thought before raising interest rates.

Julia Diniz, economist at the Resolution Foundation, said:

double quotation markThe UK labour market entered the current period of economic turbulence in a weak place, with unemployment at five per cent and real wage growth falling to zero.

With inflation set to increase over the coming months, the UK is on the cusp of its fourth period of falling real-wage growth in less than two decades. This stuttering performance goes a long way in explaining the political and economic discontent that surrounds modern Britain.

“The one silver lining to the UK’s weak labour market is that we are much less likely to see the kind of wage-price spirals that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. This should give the Bank of England pause before raising interest rates.

James Smith, developed markets economist at ING, said the UK labour market figures question the need for Bank of England rate hikes.

double quotation markThe latest UK jobs report, which features rising unemployment, sharply lower payrolls and tumbling wage growth, is a reminder that the economy is much less susceptible to ‘second round’ effects from the incoming energy shock on things like wage growth than it did four years ago in the last oil/gas shock. We’re still forecasting a rate hike in June, but that is far from guaranteed.

Following the April Bank of England meeting, we’ve tentatively been forecasting a one-and-done rate hike in June. That remains our base case, mainly because our house view on energy prices, particularly for natural gas, and given that the strait of Hormuz is showing little sign of reopening. But it’s a close call, and we remain open-minded about next month’s meeting. A lot will also depend on tomorrow’s inflation data.

Share

Leave a Comment