Are the improving unemployment figures all they seem to be? Dig a little deeper into the stats and see what you will find.

Reposted from Ripped off Britons

Wages in the UK continue to fall in real terms (rising slower than inflation) in spite of an improving labour market.

So are these falling unemployment figures really all that encouraging? 

Office of National Statistics (ONS) Labour Market Statistics count “anybody who carries out at least one hour’s paid work in a week” as “being employed“. Which means the self-employed and those on zero-hour contracts need only get one hour’s work a week to be taken out of the unemployment statistics. However, put that gloomy thought to one side and the year between the summers of 2013 and 2014 saw a sharp fall in the unemployment rate.

Statistics try to use data to shine a light on what is actually happening. However, wherever there is light there are shadows. Unemployment rates in certain occupations are double the national figure. The Office of National Statistics helpfully provides abreakdown of unemployment rates by ‘occupation of last job’ that illustrates this.

In the above graph ‘elementary occupations’ are defined by theInternational Labour Organisation (ILO) as “Elementary occupations consist of simple and routine tasks which mainly require the use of hand-held tools and often some physical effort.” In March 2014 there were 417,000 people unemployed who came from these ‘elementary occupations’. Up from a low of 290,000 just before the 2008 banking crash.

ONS data also splits the unemployment rate for each occupation into men and women. This too shows significant differences in the unemployment rate in certain occupations.

 

Should people in Elementary and Manufacturing occupations be getting on their bikes and moving into high demand trades? According to crumpled Tory sage/scallywag Ken Clarke, the UK recovery is fragile. Clarke, in an interview with the Observer, said of the recovery:

 

“It’s not firmly enough rooted on a proper balance between manufacturing and a wide range of services and financial services”

 

The central problem threatening the UK recovery is it is not balanced. Most clearly shown by the grand imbalances in unemployment rates by occupational sector. 

 

Disciples of ‘supply and demand’ who dismiss the unemployed as not supplying the skills the jobs demand forget a higher ‘supply and demand’. British industry is failing to supply the jobs the economy demands.

 

And so we end this post with what may be considered by some a pretentious quote from the poet John Donne. A quote that will probably go over the heads of those who follow a ‘devil take the hindmost’ approach:

 

“No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. If a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor of thy friend’s or of thine own were: any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind, and therefore never send to know for whom the bells tolls; it tolls for thee.”

 

High unemployment in the laborious sectors does not only toll doom for the under and unemployed, but also for the British economy as a whole.

 

Pos

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2 Responses to Are the improving unemployment figures all they seem to be? Dig a little deeper into the stats and see what you will find.

  1. sdbast says:

    Reblogged this on sdbast.

    Like

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