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These 5 charts show the state of pay and employment in Britain
These 5 charts show the state of pay and employment in Britain
Will MartinMar 28, 2018, 15:02 IST
Britain's labour market has been the subject of much head-scratching in recent years.
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The country is at close to full employment - the point at which everyone who wants a job has a job - and yet, wages have been increasing slower than inflation has been rising and productivity growth is weak.
"Despite an uptick in labour productivity in the second half of 2017, early data from 2018 suggests that this could have been an aberration," the foundation's quarterly earnings outlook report said.
"Unless the UK economy is able to raise productivity, then our ability to deliver robust real pay growth will be limited."
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The Resolution Foundation's report included a whole heap of charts looking at the state of the labour market right now, analysing where Brits are getting pay rises, how much those pay rises are, and how the near future looks for jobs.
The number of people moving jobs voluntarily is rising steadily
"Job-to-job moves are an important sign of a healthy labour market, particularly when they are voluntary," the report notes.
"Moving jobs voluntarily usually comes with a pay rise and allows others to move as well. It is therefore encouraging that moves have risen since a dramatic post-crisis fall."
"Encouragingly voluntary moves appear to be rising faster than involuntary ones and this could presage faster pay growth in the near future," it adds.
This is the chart to watch to see if the UK's seven-year decline in unemployment is coming to an end.
The above chart shows the unemployment rate for traditionally marginalised social groups, whose employment statistics tend to move slightly ahead of the majority of the UK.
If unemployment among the young, single parent, and BAME workers is increasing, the rest of the labour market will likely follow suit soon after.
"Any indication that unemployment was on the rise would first be apparent in data on groups more likely to find themselves out of work in a downturn," the Resolution Foundation notes.
"Figure 2 charts the unemployment rates for those aged 18-24, ethnic minorities, single parents and those with low qualifications. The evidence is that most groups continued to experience sustained falls in unemployment until the latest quarter (when unemployment overall ticked up)."
"However the unemployment rate for younger workers has plateaued, or risen, since Q1 2017. This group, and the others, are worth keeping an eye on for an early sign of any future labour market trouble."
London remains the place to go for workers looking for a pay rise.
Workers moving to the capital get an average salary bump of more than 17% — although London living costs are obviously far higher than the rest of the country.
"The evidence is that those that move region and employer earn the highest pay rises, although the returns differ by region. Interestingly the variation in returns and the difference between the average return earned and the return to moving to London have both risen in the post-crisis period," the report notes.
The number of people moving jobs — often a sign of dynamism in the job market — is falling
"Although the UK labour market appears tight, measures of labour market dynamism are not as perky," the report notes.
"While the share of people who move region for work is low (around 0.5 per cent of employees per annum or 100,000 people) it is a broader sign of labour market dynamism and those moving region tend to earn the highest pay rises."
The Resolution Foundation's final chart is somewhat bearish.
"Historically the pay rises enjoyed by those moving region have been far in excess of other job-movers, however this is increasingly less the case," it says.
"While the (nominal) pay rise for those moving jobs is back at pre-crisis levels (at around 6-7 per cent), the returns to moving jobs and region are down compared to the pre-crisis period."