UK destined to employ iron fist in a velvet glove with companies

Loading player...
The pandemic has asked many difficult questions of Europe’s governments, from whether to close down schools to which companies to bail out.

As economies continue to open up, politicians face a new daunting choice: should they leave their employment furlough schemes in place? These support programmes have kept workers in their jobs (artificially) at a vast cost to the public coffers, but phasing them out risks creating mass unemployment.

The proper response will involve a combination of iron fist and velvet glove. Governments must be under no illusion that they can protect all jobs in the economy. Some companies, especially in retail and leisure, were vulnerable to changing consumer habits even before Covid-19 struck. But policy makers need to have the means to help the newly unemployed, given the expected scale of joblessness. They’ll also need to ensure that any decision to taper the furlough schemes is easily reversible if a future pandemic wave shuts the economy again.

Europe’s labour markets are in a very precarious state. Take the UK: the country’s headline unemployment rate stayed at 3.9% in the second quarter of 2020, as companies kept workers on their payrolls because of the government’s generous furlough scheme, and people without a job couldn’t actively search for a new one (meaning they weren’t classed as being unemployed). However, the picture was more troubling when you looked at how many Brits actually have jobs. In the three months between April and June, there were 220,000 fewer people in work than in the previous quarter — the steepest decline since the financial crisis.

In the eurozone, meanwhile, unemployment overall has barely ticked up, to 7.8% in June from 7.7% a month earlier, as furlough schemes take much of the strain. But cracks are appearing here too. In Spain, the jobless rate rose by nearly a full percentage point to 15.3% in the three months to June, as the number of inactive people of working age rose by one-million to 17.6 million.

The good news is that Europe’s economic activity appears to be bouncing back, as governments have done a decent job — so far — in keeping the pandemic in check; certainly much better than some other countries such as the US. The labour market data are backward looking (the UK was in lockdown during much of the second quarter), and more recent indicators show a rebound in manufacturing and services.

And ...
12 Aug 2020 5AM English South Africa Business News · News

Other recent episodes

Toyota Motors SA CEO Andrew Kirby

Business Day Senior Motoring correspondent Phuti Mpyane chats to Toyota Motors SA CEO Andrew Kirby about the threats to exports, tax and Chinese vehicles in SA.
24 Oct 2024 9AM 39 min

Ford injects R5bn into production of hybrid-electric bakkies

Business Day editor-in-chief Alexander Parker speaks to Ford Africa president Neale Hill about the company's decision to spend R5.2bn to turn its SA subsidiary into the only global manufacturer of plug-in, hybrid-electric Ranger bakkies.
8 Nov 2023 9AM 13 min

Digital innovation no longer up in the clouds

The Covid-19 pandemic is the ultimate catalyst for digital transformation and will greatly accelerate several trends already well under way before the pandemic. According to research by Vodafone, 71% of firms have made at least one new technology investment in direct response to the pandemic. This shows that businesses are…
13 Sep 2020 4PM 6 min