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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Business West reports 25 per cent of South West firms concerned about the labour market

Business West is one of the largest Chambers of Commerce in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Matt Griffith, director of policy at Business West(Image: Business West )

Business West, one of the largest Chambers of Commerce in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, has published the findings of its latest Quarterly Economic Survey.

The South West chamber found that staff costs remain the leading source of price pressures for 68% of respondents. This is up 4 points since the same period last year and 74% for manufacturing businesses.

However, the report showed a drop in the number of respondents planning to increase prices in the next three months; with 40% expecting to put prices up, falling from 45% in the first quarter of 2023.

Almost 300 businesses from across the South West took part in the survey, with the results revealing that over a quarter of businesses have concerns about the labour market.

Read more: South West sees ‘disappointing’ drop in business activity, NatWest reports

Business West asked employers in the region what the main challenges were in relation to their current workforce. 62% of respondents said they are worried about meeting staff expectations in terms of pay and benefit increases. 37% said that employee retention was a challenge, while 36% cited supporting staff morale and wellbeing.

Chris Payne, senior programme manager at CT Engineering Group, an engineering consultancy based in South Gloucestershire, said: “Our industry is currently going through a period of high staff demand versus a low resource pool. This is driving up wages and affecting profit margins.”

Alan Broadway, owner of Oval Estates Group, a property company based in Bath, said: “Two staff have completed degree courses whilst in full time employment. We are currently recruiting a couple of apprentices and train staff internally as required and send them on training courses.”