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Jobless total hits two million for first time in over a decade

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Published Date: 18 March 2009
UNEMPLOYMENT in the UK surged past two million for the first time in 12 years today, while the number of people signing on for benefit soared by a record 138,000 last month, grim new figures showed today.
The Government was hit by a raft of gloomy news, with redundancies reaching a record high, jobs and vacancies falling and more people claiming jobseeker's allowance.

The total number of people out of work, including those not eligible for benefit, jumped by 165,000 in the quarter to January to 2.03 million, the worst figure since Labour came to power in the summer of 1997.

Compared with other parts of the UK, the figures for Scotland were not quite so alarming, but the total unemployed did climb to 135,000 in the quarter, a rise of 5.1%.

The quarterly rise for the UK as a whole was the highest since 1991, and the total has now increased by 421,000 over the past year, said the Office for National Statistics.

Jobseeker's allowance claimants increased by 138,400 in February, the 13th consecutive monthly rise and the largest monthly increase since records began in 1971.

The new total of 1.39 million is almost 600,000 higher than a year ago and is the highest figure since 1998.

A total of 266,000 people became redundant in the three months to January, the worst figure since records began in 1995 and up by 86,000 on the previous quarter.

The number of jobs fell by 203,000 to 31.3 million in the quarter to December, the largest slump since 1992.

Vacancies fell by 74,000 to 482,000 in the three months to February, the lowest total since comparable records began in 2001.

Other figures showed that average earnings increased by 1.8% in the year to January, the lowest since records began in 1991, while for the month of January alone wages fell by 0.2% – the first time this has ever happened.

The unemployment rate is now 6.5%, an increase of 1.3% over the year, the highest figure since the end of 1997.

The number of people employed in the public sector was 5.78 million in December, up by 15,000 over the quarter and by 30,000 over the year, while employment in private firms fell by 13,000 to 23.6 million over the quarter and by 105,000 over the year.

The only piece of good news for ministers in today's figures was a 102,000 fall in the number of people classed as economically inactive, to 7.8 million, the lowest for almost three years.

The figure includes people looking after a relative, those on long-term sick leave, students and people who have given up looking for work.

Manufacturing productivity fell by 5.6% in the quarter to January, the biggest cut since 1985.

TUC general secretary Brendan Barber said: "This is another milestone in the return of mass unemployment to the UK, and it will get worse before it gets better as unemployment always persists even after a recovery starts.

"But this unemployment has not just been made in Britain, and requires an international response. It is beginning to look like the G20 summit may not agree the co-ordinated boost to the world economy called for by Barack Obama and Gordon Brown.

"International summits may seem a long way from the dole queues, but without such a stimulus unemployment will go higher and last longer.
"We need to put every pressure on world leaders to work together to fight the recession."

Paul Kenny, general secretary of the GMB, said: "As well as the misery for the two million on the dole, add the fear of millions of others who know that they too are at risk of redundancy. We do not know who the next million to lose their job will be.

"The harsh reality is that capitalism is revealed as anarchy writ large. Voters are not known to vote for anarchy. This could impact on voters at the next election."

Peter Mooney, of Employment Law Advisory Services, said he believed the figures may be an under-estimate of the true level of unemployment.

"This is a huge psychological blow to British business. While the figures seem shocking, we are not in the least surprised. The number of firms seeking help in making redundancies has sky-rocketed, and that is continuing, shooting up week on week.

"These figures are at best a fuzzy picture of what was true up to January – but things have worsened considerably since then.

"We are seeing jobs slashed drastically – especially in the North East, West Midlands, North West and parts of London."

Alan Tomlinson, partner at licensed insolvency practitioner Tomlinsons, said he had never been so busy, adding: "Companies of all sizes, and in all sectors, are folding by the day, putting more and more people out of a job.

"The CBI's prediction, last month, that unemployment will peak at just over three million in the second quarter of 2010 could prove to be wildly optimistic."

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  • Last Updated: 18 March 2009 10:03 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Unemployment , Recession
 
1

JayJay,

Right here 18/03/2009 10:56:51
I have just watched the consistently appalling Tony McNulty, who laughably calls himself an Employment Minister, huff and puff his way through a quite disgraceful set of figures, with some specifics thrown in. This man, charged with having his finger on the pulse in the Employment market, seemed unaware of a decision by Cadbury to transfer production of chocolate to Poland, with the loss of several hundred jobs ("commercial decision, not my problem") and in outright denial about the impact of Banks denying working capital finance to successful trading businesses (don't know, don't care seemed to sum up his demeanour).
I would love to know where Labour dig up these people. We are in the middle of a frightening economic mess, and the time for the usual politician's weasel works, deflection, denial and question avoidance is most certainly not now. If these creeps can't get on top of the situation, can't they just step aside and give the job to someone who is on top of his brief and actually gives a hoot?
2

,

18/03/2009 11:01:53
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3

Tris,

18/03/2009 11:22:35
Unbelievably, this moronic government is in the middle of a programme of closures of Jobcentres.

I agree with #1. McNulty is a bad joke. He might have been OK in the job when everything was going well, but now he should move over and let a grown up in.

The public deserves that, at least.
4

Pavla,

Irvine 18/03/2009 11:22:47
As well as their light touch banking approach lets not forget Blair and Brown introduced employment practices giving millions workers no job security,permanent contracts and little rights making them the easiest targets for multinationals to sack.Now the TUC and STUC take their heads out of the sand or rather where it has been stuck for ten years up the ---- of New Labour.I can't wait to see Brown and his cabal marching behind trade union banners demanding the right to work in years to come during a probable future Tory government it will make me sick to walk behind these hypocrites both Labour politicians and senior trade union officials.
5

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 18/03/2009 11:59:06
It always ends in tears after a few years of Labour - last time this happened the slogan was "Labour's not working". How true, yet the morons who keep on voting for them cause the same problem time and again. Definition of stupid - repeatedly doing something which you know is wrong or fails. They have no one to blame but themselves, Labour and the likes of Tony McNulty have an array of failure excuses and assertions like JobCentre Plus is a "success". Some success - if it were a commercial enterprise it would be wound up. Because of Labour's knee-jerk response to SMEs they seem incapable or reluctant to finance small businesses which keep employment going to tide them over this period and keep them solvent. How stupid is that? Well, just about as stupid as having uncontrolled immigration and too many people on "incapacity" benefit. As regards the latter, before anyone starts foaming at the mouth I do mean those who are perfectly capable of doing a job but have been institutionally conditioned by successive governments that it's just not worth the bother to get off the sofa and moreover there are few penalties if you don't.

Add built-in corruption and sharp practice in banks and in Westminster and the House of Lords and you have the Grand Bargain for economic disaster and dole queues. It really doesn't take much to have a successful economy so it shows how crippled we are with this failed government who need to be pushed out and quickly. And hold the promised EU referendum which would no doubt indicate a bale-out from that equally corrupt and useless alliance.
6

im brian and so is my wife,

edinburgh 18/03/2009 12:22:52
have seen a few on the scotsmans site,putting down joe giro,but no ones job is safe in this climate
reading some was like being back in the thatcher years,where yuppy drunks would urinate on homeless peole in london,guffawing whilst doing it
chinless wonders yapping whilst devouring £100 bottles of carbonated rat wee,all raking in vast amounts
now with the unemploymeant grim reper on the prowl no place is safe,even mps msps and toady lords ,matter not a jot
when the reaper strikes,kiss goodbye to your earnings,join the faceless line of job seekers,all battling for the few jobs that are going,if not taken up by poles
7

im brian and so is my wife,

edinburgh 18/03/2009 12:24:04
oops typo reaper not reper but there you go even he has had to make cuts
8

Tartan Viking,

18/03/2009 12:41:03
#1. You should have heard McNumpty on the radio today - he sounded as if he couldn't give a to*s with a 'I'm alright Jack' attitude.

#3. I agree. But then, this mob have absolutely no idea what they are doing. Run the economy? Couldn't run a bath.
9

Tartan Viking,

18/03/2009 12:42:59
Anyway, with regards tot he headlines, let's all give a round of applause to all the Labour voters. Thanks very much. And a special mention to those in Glenrothes. Thanks once again for your wise decision to vote for them again.

Idiots.
10

Alasdair mac Alasdair Mór Mac an Righ,,

18/03/2009 12:58:37
Just spoke to someone from 1car1 the rental company about renting a car. He stated his company are now in administration. 800 workers paid off and yet the business made £5million profit last year. It seems their bankers the Royal Bank of Scotland decided to close their finance arrangements.

A total disgrace. A Sucessful business with growing reputation going down the pan to improve the bankers balance sheet. A bank owned the the government.

It angers me so much that many good hard working people through no fault of their own will loose their homes becuase of the incompetence of the Labour government and the greed of the London Stock Exchange plus a few peers of the realm and friends of government.
11

Number 6,

Germany 18/03/2009 13:06:28
Well unionistas ? still going to vote for Labour?

Just look at that list of statistics. Horrific !!!!.

And this in an economy, we have been told repeatedly is "Fundamentaly strong" or "Well placed to ride out the reccesion".

It has now become too humiliating to be seen voting for this garbage, even in Scotland. In South Britain, they will be lucky to have any representation at Westminster after the next GE.

We have seen here, time and time again, it is nigh on immpossible to get any poster to admit they will be voting Labour at the next election.

They too are ashamed of what they are doing,and are certainly too scared to support them in public.

Skulking about in the shadows. Labour and their supporters, they really suit each other.

9 # Tartan Viking: SPOT ON.
12

Tartan Viking,

18/03/2009 13:12:45
#10. Alasdair mac Alasdair Mór Mac an Righ,,

"It seems their bankers the Royal Bank of Scotland decided to close their finance arrangements."

This is the problem Alasdair. The banks have no bloody right to do this. The taxpayer has bailed them out to the tune of BILLIONS and the instruction from the government was to lend this out to keep the economy from going under. Yet, the banks have stuck two fingers up at the government and the taxpayers, and have used the money to strengthen their own balance sheet, including pumping £800 million of our money into THEIR pension fund. Absolutely incredible. I just cannot believe they can do this and get away with it. If this government can't sort it out they should be booted out of office at once and the banks nationalised and control given to the public.
13

Alan B,

18/03/2009 13:16:27
Jobless have been well over 2million for a long while as labour make the tories look like amatuers when it comes to hiding the unemployment figures. The massive increase under labour of incapacity (to 2.7million) is a prime example.
14

Alan B,

18/03/2009 13:18:24
The only difference with labour this time is it took till the 3rd term in office before the wheels fell off and they virtually bankrupt the country.
15

Tartan Viking,

18/03/2009 13:24:52
#14. Yes we forget that the public somehow voted this mob in for a THIRD term! Shows you we have our fair share of festering idiots amongst our voters.

All I say is this. Please people, for the sake of our future, and the future of our children, don't repeat the mistake a fourth time. Come on now? we have gone far enough and it's time for a new dovernment and a new direction. Time for a fresh approach altogether. Even you die-hard Labour supporters must realise this by now. Come on now.
16

Tartan Viking,

18/03/2009 13:25:30
new government even......typing a bit off today.
17

JayJay,

Right here 18/03/2009 13:31:38
#8
I don't know if McNulty either knows or cares, but he is seriously deluded if he believes that his standard guff about "job centre plus" solving the problem is fooling anyone. He, and his equally inept Government, need to listen to real people's experiences, rather than resorting to the usual tedious nonsense of either not answering the question, or answering a question he'd rather answer that has not been posed!
Reality is the Banks - and I work in the sector - are either not lending at all, are reducing existing facilities, or are making existing facilies far more expensive. Whatever schemes our daft PM thinks are "helping business" are simply not on offer. The banks don't want to lend, simply because they are all about balance sheet repair at the moment.
How we came to inject several hundred billion into banks who have defied and continue to ignore government instructions on money supply is beyond me. Mind you, if you live in LaLaLand with all our political masters, it is seemingly easy to persuade yourself that you are being effective.
18

Richard Lionheart,

18/03/2009 13:36:48
"we have ended boom and bust, we have learnt the lessons of the past and we have more people in employment in the UK than at any time in the past"
GB
19

Nikostratos,,

18/03/2009 13:40:25
#11 Number 6

Certainly am going to vote labour...and i got a labour poster in me window.

labour till i die...........
20

Tartan Viking,

18/03/2009 13:53:22
#19. Under this government the day of your termination may be sooner than you think. When you've no job, no house and the county is bankrupt, you'll probably starve to death mate.
21

Nikostratos,,

18/03/2009 14:17:45
#20

then I'll die a labour man...suits me fine
22

Scythia,

18/03/2009 14:33:56
Let me see, we have 130,000 jobseekers in Scotland, 17,000 vacancies, and an estimated 100,000 + Eastern Europeans holding down a job

Meanwhile the UK will admit 167,000 'skilled' foreigners to the UK in 2009 under the dubiously named 'highly skilled migrant programme',of which our 'nationalist' government has just submitted a skills shortage list which includes every single profession in the list.

The political and employer classes in this country have betrayed the ordinary citizen.
23

Raymond Thomas Brooke,

Leven Beverley 18/03/2009 14:48:46
There is obviously no credit crunch(recession) in the public sector infact business seems to be booming. Can these managers give the rest of us the information on how they are acheiving this.once we get back to work we can then afford to pay our taxes and council taxes again maybe even a luxury or two
24

Active Sassenach,

Luton, England 18/03/2009 16:22:10
http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/unemployment/So-where-are-the-500000.4962659.jp

David Laws proved that only 271,000 of the previous claim of 500,000 jobs actually existed. Yet we read: "Vacancies fell by 74,000 to 482,000 in the three months to February, the lowest total since comparable records began in 2001." Vacancies are a lot less if the jobs in Jobcentres are counted. At Work and Pensions questions, Hansard 16 March 2009 Col 644:

Mr. James Clappison (Hertsmere) (Con): Evidence from all quarters now suggests that there are many more jobseekers than there are vacancies advertised in jobcentres or vacancies in the economy as a whole—not least in the Secretary of State’s own constituency, where there are 18 jobseekers for every vacancy in the jobcentres. I welcome the fact that Ministers have now given up on the complacent assertions that they were making until recently about the number of vacancies in the economy. I include the Secretary of State, who was making such assertions until very recently.

Tony McNulty: The Secretary of State and I are more than aware of the reality facing people in this country. If there is any complacency, assertion and smugness, it resides on the Opposition Benches, whose Members indulge in fantasy politics and put no money up.

This was not a proper answer when I saw it on TV and it is even less convincing now.
25

,

18/03/2009 18:11:46
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26

,

18/03/2009 23:42:23
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27

im brian and so is my wife,

edinburgh 19/03/2009 00:12:28
#26 ja ze scots vote in herr broon,lots unemployed ja,they can join the new order,and ve vill march on poland,it vill be easy as vey are all here
achtung achtung herr broon has spoken,ze new minister for propoganda vill be herr mandilson
seig heil seig heil,this time no more mr nice guy ja

 

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