Northern Ireland recorded its highest number of redundancies since 2001

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By Q Radio news

Northern Ireland's recorded its highest number of redundancies  since 2001. 

Labour market statistics show last month, 2 hundred and 50 lay offs were confirmed - taking the annual total to 5 thousand, 7 hundred and 80. 

Meanwhile, 10 thousand and 90 redundancies were proposed in the twelve months to the end of March - More than double the number recorded the year before.

10,090 collective redundancies were proposed in the twelve months to the end of March, more than double the number recorded in the previous twelve months (4,800). 170 redundancies were proposed in the three month period January – March 2021.


During March 250 redundancies were confirmed, taking the annual total to 5,780, the highest since 2001.
 
NI Claimant Count (Experimental Series) almost double one year ago

In March 2021, the seasonally adjusted number of people on the claimant count was 58,100 (5.9% of the workforce), which is a decrease of 100 (0.2%) from the previous month’s revised figure and 8.9% below the recent peak in May. The claimant count remains almost double the number recorded in March 2020 and is similar to levels previously seen in 2014.
 
Payrolled employees and employee earnings both increased over the month to February

The number of employees receiving pay through HMRC PAYE in NI in February 2021 was 744,300, an increase of 0.2% over the month and a decrease of 1.2% over the year. The flash estimate for March 2021 shows a marginal decrease of less than 0.1% on February’s figure to 744,100.
 
Earnings from the HMRC PAYE indicated that NI employees had a median monthly pay of £1,780 in February 2021. This was an increase of 0.1% over the month and 4.7% over the year. The flash estimate for March 2021 shows a further increase of 0.7% from February’s figure to £1,792.
 
The unemployment rate increased over the quarter and over the year

The latest NI seasonally adjusted unemployment rate (the proportion of economically active people aged 16+ who were unemployed) for the period December-February 2021 was estimated from the Labour Force Survey at 3.7%.

The unemployment rate increased by 0.5 percentage points (pps) over the quarter and by 1.2pps over the year. The annual change was statistically significant and is likely to reflect real change.
 
The proportion of people aged 16 to 64 in work (the employment rate) decreased over the quarter and the year by 1.6pps and by 3.5pps respectively to 69.0%. The annual change was statistically significant and is likely to reflect real change.
 
The economic inactivity rate (the proportion of people aged 16 to 64 who were not working and not seeking or available to work) increased over the quarter by 1.3pps and over the year by 2.7pps to 28.3%. The annual change was statistically significant and is likely to reflect real change.
 
Put into the context of the UK, NI had the second lowest unemployment rate, the lowest employment rate and the highest economic inactivity rate of all the UK regions.
 
The latest labour market data show that employment levels (which include furloughed jobs) remain below pre-covid levels, while measures of unemployment remain above pre-covid levels.
 
The HMRC payroll data is the most timely and best single, overall indicator of the labour market.

The latest data shows that, after remaining relatively constant between April and November 2020, the number of paid employees increased for three consecutive months to February and decreased marginally in March 2021. Despite the recent increases, the flash estimate for March 2021 remains 1.3% below the total one year earlier.
 
Statistically significant changes were seen in the three headline LFS indicators over the year.

The employment rate (69.0%) is now 3.5 percentage points below the rate this time last year, and unemployment and economic inactivity rates are now 1.2 percentage points and 2.7 percentage points above.

Although all age groups saw a fall in employment over the year, 16-24 year olds accounted for approximately two-thirds of the total decrease in employment of those aged 16-64 years.
 
The pace of collective redundancy proposals has slowed in 2021, with 170 proposed in the three months January – March 2021.

This follows record levels in June and July, and historically high levels through to December. Provisional HMRC data for February shows 106,500 employments (jobs meeting the scheme eligibility criteria) were receiving support under the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme at 28 February.

January and February daily furlough counts averaged 115,000 and were below levels of approximately 139,000 recorded at the start of July 2020 (the first month for which daily counts are available). 

 

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