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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Jobs decline eases but fears over second Covid wave 'weigh heavily' on recruitment decisions, KPMG and REC º£½ÇÊÓÆµ report shows

Unemployment is also likely to rise further as the furlough scheme unwinds, report shows

Jennifer Lee, of KPMG

The decline in permanent job placements across the North eased to its softest rate for five months in July, but fears over a second Covid wave "weigh heavily" on employer decision making, a new study has shown.

The KPMG and REC º£½ÇÊÓÆµ report on jobs today reveals July saw a softer, but still marked decline in recruitment activity, with demand for permanent and temporary staff continuing to fall sharply.

That was while staff availability rose "substantially" as firms announced waves of redundancies due to the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

The report was compiled by IHS Markit and based on responses from 100 recruitment and employment consultancies across the North. It also revealed that the combination of higher labour supply and weaker demand for workers drove sharp falls in both starting salaries and temp wages.

Jennifer Lee, head of KPMG’s Liverpool office, said: “With the softest rates of decline seen for five months, it’s encouraging to see the downturn in recruitment easing across the North West as parts of the economy reopen.

“However, we are still a long way from being out of the woods, with hiring plans remaining on ice and the uncertain outlook – compounded in part by concerns around a possible second wave of the virus and  the reintroduction of lockdown measures across parts of the region - still weighing heavily on business’ recruitment decisions.

“As the furlough scheme unwinds, unemployment is likely to rise further, proving both an opportunity and challenge for government to create training and skills programmes for jobseekers – and help bring confidence back to our regional workforce.”

The month also saw the fastest decline in permanent starting pay since May 2009 - during the global financial crisis.