British worker numbers have rebounded further in July as the labour market recovery continued despite the initial winding down of the furlough scheme, according to official figures.
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) revealed that the number of British workers on payrolls rose by 182,000 between June and July, although at 28.9 million it is still 201,000 lower than before the pandemic struck.
The statistics body also confirmed that the rate of unemployment had dipped to 4.7 per cent for the three-month period to the end of June.
Analysts had predicted that the unemployment rate would stay flat at 4.8 per cent for the quarter.
The ONS also reported a further surge in job vacancies as firms seek to fill roles following the reopening of the economy, rising by more than 290,000 against the previous quarter.
It added that, at 953,000, the number of vacancies was the highest estimated figure since records were started in 2001.
Arts, leisure and food service firms particularly contributed to the surge in job openings, it added.
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Jonathan Athow, deputy national statistician for economic statistics at the ONS, said: “The world of work continues to rebound robustly from the effects of the pandemic.
“The number of people on payroll was up again strongly and has now grown over half a million in the past three months, regaining about four-fifths of the fall seen at the start of the pandemic.
“Meanwhile, early survey figures show that the number of job vacancies passed one million for the first time ever in July.
“There was no sign of redundancies starting to pick up in our survey data ahead of the furlough scheme beginning to wind down, and Insolvency Service figures for July suggest the same.”
The data also showed total wage growth including bonuses lifted higher to 8.8 per cent, or 7.4 per cent without bonuses, for the three months to June.
In response to the figures, Chancellor Rishi Sunak said: “Today’s figures show that our plan for jobs is working – saving people’s jobs and getting people back into work.
“I know there could still be bumps in the road but the data is promising – there are now more employees on payrolls than at any point since March 2020 and the number of people on furlough is the lowest since the scheme launched.”
Yael Selfin, chief economist at KPMG UK, said: “The labour market outperformed expectations as the economy accelerated with the relaxation of Covid-related restrictions.
“Changes to the business environment, such as the fall in business travel and the rise in online commerce, increased the need for skills, from IT specialists to hauliers, while at the same time caused an unusually high level of mismatch in the UK’s labour market.”