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UK redundancies hit record high as job market slumps in third quarter

Staff Reporter by Staff Reporter
November 10, 2020
in Global
GRAPHIC-UK redundancies hit record high in Q3 (Reuters)

GRAPHIC-UK redundancies hit record high in Q3 (Reuters)

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GRAPHIC-UK redundancies hit record high in Q3 (Reuters)

LONDON (Reuters) – British employers laid off a record number of staff in the third quarter and the jobless rate jumped as the labour market weakened before finance minister Rishi Sunak made a U-turn on COVID support measures.

A record 314,000 British workers were made redundant in the three months to September, 181,000 more than in the second quarter, the Office for National Statistics said on Tuesday.

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The unemployment rate rose to 4.8%, the highest rate since the three months to November 2016, from 4.5% in the three months to August, as expected in a Reuters poll of economists.

While the public and investors were cheered on Monday by news that an experimental COVID-19 vaccine was more than 90% effective in trials, the ONS data showed hard months lie ahead for many Britons.

Last week, Sunak was forced to extend his costly coronavirus furlough scheme, which provides 80% of the pay of temporarily laid-off workers, until the end of March, and he outlined billions of pounds in other forms of help.

“Unfortunately the extension of the furlough scheme didn’t come soon enough for some workers but it should help stem the rise in unemployment over the winter,” said Jon Hudson, a fund manager at Premier Miton.

The BoE expects around 5.5 million employees will need furlough support during an England-wide lockdown this month, up from just over 2 million in October.

The end to the Brexit transition period in seven weeks’ time has also weighed on employers’ confidence, with no trade deal struck yet between Britain and the European Union.

Sunak said after the data was published that the ONS figures “underline the scale of the challenge we’re facing”.
Sunak’s critics have said his previous reluctance to extend the programme led to unnecessary redundancies.

“The government’s failure to face up to the scale of this jobs crisis in time has cost people their livelihoods,” said Jonathan Reynolds, the jobs spokesman for the opposition Labour Party.

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