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PRIVACY
Economic Development

South West jobs market recovers but wage growth lags behind inflation

Huge drop in benefits claimants across region and lots of jobs available but soaring cost of living outstrips pay rises

There are lots of unfilled construction jobs across the South West

The South West jobs market is continuing to recover with a huge drop in the number of people claiming benefits - but wages lag behind soaring inflation.

Latest figures from the Department for Work and Pensions show 108,397 people were claiming Universal Credit in the region, a 36% drop from a year earlier when the Covid lockdowns were having a major effect.

But though the figure is down by 59,797 year on year, it is still 33,5325 more than five years ago - possibly because of a decline in the number of self-employed people.


The number of people employed in the region is now at 2.7million, giving an employment rate of 77%, which is higher than the national average of 7.8%.

In Exeter, the claimant count at the end of November 2021, the most recent figures available, was 2,296, which was down by 36% year-on-year.

Plymouth’s total of 7,049 was down 31%, North Devon’s 1,654 was a decline of 41% and the 1,141 in Torridge was down by 43%. In Bristol, there were 38,894 Universal Credit claimants in January 2022.

The DWP has opened 13 new Jobcentres in the region, including in Plymouth and Exeter, and seven youth hubs, with an aim of hitting a national target of getting 500,000 claimants into work by June 2022.

And there remain many jobs available with employers increasingly complaining about a shortage of candidates and online job adverts in the region having risen by 10.6% since the start of the Covid pandemic.