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UK labour market outlook bleakest since 1992: Study

AFP
London, United KingdomUpdated: Jun 09, 2020, 11:09 AM IST
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The UK allowed shops and officer to reopen few weeks back to save its falling economy. However, the reopening of he economy, coupled with the protests happening in the country, some experts fear a second wave of coronavirus in the country. These fears further aggravated as the UK government decided to scrap the social distancing rule, even after facing criticism from the health experts. Photograph:(Reuters)

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Employment consultancy ManpowerGroup revealed the outcome of a survey of 1,056 UK employers, which comes as Britain continues to relax its COVID-19 lockdown

The outlook for Britain's coronavirus-blighted labour market is at its bleakest for almost 30 years despite the easing lockdown, a survey showed Tuesday.

Employment consultancy ManpowerGroup revealed the outcome of a survey of 1,056 UK employers, which comes as Britain continues to relax its COVID-19 lockdown.

"Hiring intentions for the third quarter of 2020 are down to minus 12 percent, with a sharp drop across all major sectors," ManpowerGroup said in a statement, noting this was the worst level since it began the survey in 1992.

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The so-called net employment outlook is calculated by subtracting the number of employers who want to cut staff from those wanting to hire staff.

On a more optimistic note, ManpowerGroup added that most UK businesses expected to return to normality over the next twelve months.

"Employers remain cautiously optimistic that this will be temporary with ... 57 percent of employers expecting to return to pre-COVID-19 hiring levels by this time next year."

Mark Cahill, managing director of ManpowerGroup UK, noted the data showed "unprecedented" disruption from the disease, which has killed more than 40,000 in Britain.

"While there's no getting away from the challenges that lie ahead, the data underlines the resilience of UK employers," Cahill said.

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He added: "The level of disruption is unprecedented and many will be looking closely at what happens next with how COVID-19 progresses, how consumers respond and what all this means for their own operations.”

Recent official UK data also painted a dire picture of the current state of the labour market.

The number of Britons claiming jobless benefit soared nearly 70 percent in April to 2.1 million.

Unemployment claims surged by a record 856,000 from March, according to the Office for National Statistics. 

Britain imposed a lockdown on March 23 to halt the spread of the virus, and launched a furlough jobs retention scheme under which the state temporarily pays the bulk of wages.