UK Unemployment Rate Surpasses Pre-COVID Lows As Shortages Persist

 | May 17, 2022 06:16AM ET

The UK jobs market is undeniably hot right now, but that could change. The Bank of England has forecast higher unemployment, although much obviously depends on whether we see a more severe economic downturn.

Barring that, the potential for ongoing worker shortages probably means there's a strong incentive for firms to avoid layoffs

For now, at least, the UK jobs market looks pretty hot. The unemployment rate, at 3.7%, has now surpassed its pre-virus lows, and there’s more than one job vacancy for every unemployed worker.

Last month was the first time that had happened in the 20 years that data is available. Solid hiring demand and a lack of workers means wage growth is running a little faster than it was pre-pandemic, while the Bank of England’s latest survey shows that most firms feel able to pass these costs on.

Of course, the big risk now is that this story begins to change. In a less-than-subtle message to investors, the Bank of England recently forecast that the unemployment rate could rise above 5% again over the next couple of years—a signal that market pricing on rate hikes has gone too far.

There's now one vacancy per unemployed worker in the UK