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Enterprise

Workers ditch London for north amid city job cuts and rising living costs

The latest jobs report from KPMG and the REC showed demand for workers in the capital has "continued to deteriorate" with both permanent placements and temp billings slumping further

Morning commuters on London Bridge(Image: Getty Images)

London recruitment has maintained its sharp downturn as businesses face the fallout from Reeves' tax assault and escalating expenses.

The most recent employment data from KPMG and the REC revealed that worker demand in the capital has "continued to deteriorate" with both permanent appointments and temporary invoicing declining further, as reported by .

Permanent staff appointments, positions without fixed termination dates, dropped for the fifth month running.

Meanwhile, temporary invoicing, which monitors the aggregate revenue recruitment firms generate from placing short-term workers with companies, plummeted for a twentieth consecutive month.

Anna Purchas, London office senior partner at KPMG º£½ÇÊÓÆµ said, "London's job market remains under pressure, with both permanent and temporary hiring down in August."

Although recruitment in the capital continues falling, the marketplace is displaying potential indicators of stabilisation as the rate of decline "eased sharply" compared to July.

Purchas said, "The positive news is that the pace of decline has slowed, which suggests conditions may be starting to stabilise.

"It gives employers a real chance to tap into a wide pool of experienced talent."