Cracks start to show in UK jobs market as unemployment rises
LONDON — Unemployment in the U.K. edged up in July even though large parts of the economy reopened after the coronavirus lockdown, a signal that the jobless rate is set to spike higher when a government salary-support scheme ends in the autumn.
The 104,000 rise in the number of people unemployed during the three-month period to July took the total to 1.4 million, and raised the unemployment rate by 0.2 percentage points to 4.1% — the biggest increase since the pandemic began.
The rise in unemployment came even after the reopening of the hospitality sector in early July, following the reopening of shops selling items deemed as nonessential, such as clothes and books, a few weeks earlier. The reopening of key sectors in the economy meant many people could return to work following months at home.
To prevent an immediate spike in unemployment when the lockdown was announced in late March, the government introduced the Job Retention Scheme, which saw it pay the bulk of the salary of workers that firms kept on payroll rather than making them redundant.