The Daily Telegraph

Workforce crisis deepens as firms fail to fill vacancies

- By Madeleine Ross

ONE-IN-FIVE employers is struggling to fill job vacancies, according to a survey revealing the scale of Britain’s workforce crisis.

New figures from the Chartered Institute of Personnel Developmen­t (CIPD) show that 21pc of firms expect to encounter significan­t hiring issues over the next six months, while one in 10 said they plan to reduce headcount.

The former marks an improvemen­t on the 29pc recorded last quarter, although the labour market remains at its weakest point since August 2013.

Fewer employers are adopting wage rises to fill vacancies, the report stated, and are instead planning to cut staff or recruit less.

The National Institute of Economic and Social Research warned last week that businesses have b e c o me “frustrated” with British workers.

The number of firms registerin­g to become sponsors to hire abroad has doubled since 2022, as more than nine million people of working age have dropped out of the jobs market.

More than 5m are now on out-ofwork benefits, according to the Office for National Statistics, up from 3.5m in 2015. Jon Boys, an economist for the CIPD, said: “This feels l i ke a key moment in the UK labour market.

“Employer attention is shifting from helping staff weather the cost of living crisis to focus on business sustainabi­lity and growth, which will impact headcount in some places.”

He said that in the age of working from home, profession­s such as teaching and nursing may be less attractive.

The survey also revealed that basic pay expectatio­ns for the next year have fallen for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic, from 5pc to 4pc.

It came as the BDO Employment Index showed that Britain’s labour market was at its weakest for more than a decade, giving it a ranking of 98.77.

Projection­s from the Centre for Economic and Business Research show the unemployme­nt rate climbing in the coming months and hitting 4.6pc in the second quarter of the year.

The Bank of England said earlier this month that Britain’s workforce will be “permanentl­y smaller” as a result of the pandemic, citing “increasing detachment” from workers.

A greater number of baby boomers reaching retirement age means that the number of Britons in the workforce was already “trending down”, the Bank said.

‘Employer attention is shifting from helping staff weather the cost of living crisis to focus on growth’

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