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| Deep-rooted structural problems won’t be solved by recovery alone |
CBI LABOUR MARKET ANALYSIS REVEALS SCALE OF CHALLENGE TO GET Deep-rooted structural problems won’t be solved by recovery alone The CBI today (Monday) unveiled detailed analysis of the The report, Mapping the route to growth: rebalancing employment, marks the start of a major new project for the CBI which will explore what is needed to get the By mapping the state of the labour market region-by-region1, the CBI’s analysis reveals that the decade of growth before the recession masked entrenched problems, including pockets of long-term unemployment and inactivity, high public sector dependency and serious skills shortages. The mapping was conducted by Esri Projections of future employment trends suggest these labour market divisions will deepen as the recovery continues, with highly-skilled jobs expected to be most in demand in John Cridland, CBI Director-General, said: “The Government has rightly focused on tackling the structural deficit in the public finances, but needs to apply the same rigour to attacking the structural jobs deficit. “The boom years before the recession masked the extent of deep-rooted problems in parts of the labour market, including long-term unemployment and an unhealthy dependency on the public sector. These problems will not disappear with the economic recovery and left unchecked will have grave social and economic consequences. “Only private sector growth can create the jobs we need and we must ensure the fruits of recovery are felt in every region. We need to get the The report sets out the complexity of the unemployment problem, which is linked to many factors including skills, local economic performance, welfare dependency, educational achievement and infrastructure. Looking at the state of the labour market in more detail, there are currently 2.46 million unemployed people in the · Five million working age people receive out of work benefits, with 1.4 million of these having received benefits for nine of the last ten years. · Two million children grow up in households where no one works and these children are more likely to fail to achieve in school, perpetuating the cycle. · Since the start of the recession youth unemployment has risen significantly with 935,000 16 to 24 year-olds out of work. Mr Cridland added: “Our analysis shows that problems in the labour market do not follow a simple North-South divide, but are far more complex. “The answer is not bussing people to where the jobs are. We need to tackle the structural causes of unemployment, while doing all we can to get the private sector really motoring in all regions of the “In the coming months the CBI will be working with a broad range of businesses and other stakeholders to come up with practical solutions to help get all of the UK working.” The CBI’s analysis reveals that unemployment patterns are highly regionalised. The maps can be viewed at: http://employment.cbi.org.uk/projects/getting-the-uk-working/interactive-maps. Key findings include: · Unemployment does not follow a simple North-South divide. Hopes that regional disparities had begun to close since the 1990s recession were undermined by the 2008-09 recession, which had an asymmetric impact across the · Urban areas tend to suffer from pockets of high unemployment. These include: Teesside, · Areas with the strongest jobs growth over 2004-07 saw the most rapid falls in employment during the recession. This suggests that in many cases job creation in these areas was driven by a cyclical economic boom, rather than sustainable structural improvement in the labour market. · Public sector dependency is particularly high in · The |
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