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Economic Development

Number of South West jobseekers doubles during coronavirus pandemic

DWP figures show 183,000 people are actively looking for work in the region as redundancies increase and unemployment rises

Thousands of people are looking for work in the South West

The number of people looking for work in the South West has more than doubled since the coronavirus pandemic struck with 183,000 officially seeking jobs.

A range of figures from the Government paint a grim employment picture for the region, as the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ saw 819,000 fewer workers on company payrolls in November 2020.

The number of staff on payrolls across the South West was at 2.366million in November, and although this was up 8,000 on the previous quarter it is down 56,000 from February, before the pandemic struck - a 2.3% drop in employment.

And the Alternative Claimant Count (ACC), the Department for Work and Pensions’ figure which shows all the people claiming Universal Credit (UC) who are actually seeking employment, has swelled by 103,000 in the same period.

Plymouth's Job Centre Plus, the South West has thousands of people seeking work(Image: William Telford)

The 128.7% jump since February means there are now 183,000 people in this category, which is 10,000 more than the previous quarter, showing the jobs crisis is worsening.

That is higher than the 125,000 officially classed as unemployed during the most recent quarter, because the ACC includes people such as students, or those in part-time work, or spouses not claiming for unemployment benefits because a partner works, but perhaps in receipt of a housing benefit.

But the unemployment figure has risen by 34,000 since February, and 12,00 on the previous quarter.

The DWP says The ACC is a more accurate picture than the ONS figures, however, and reveal that n the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, to the end of August, the ACC was at 2,716,766, an 118% rise from the same time in 2019 when it stood at 1,470,638. This can be compared to 5,830,557 total claiming the UC benefit.