Availability continues to rise for both perm and temp candidates

November saw increased availability of workers for the ninth straight month of the year, countered by lingering economic uncertainty and hesitancy to commit to new hires.

According to the KPMG and the Recruitment & Employment Confederation’s (REC’s) latest ‘UK Report on Jobs’, the rise in candidate supply of both permanent and temp staff was the quickest for almost three years.

Recruiters surveyed by S&P Global for the report widely linked the increased availability to redundancies and workers concerned over current job security. 

At the same time, the report said, rates of starting salary and temp pay inflation slipped to nearly three-year lows. “While competition for suitably-skilled workers continued to push up pay overall, budgetary pressures at clients had reportedly weighed on overall growth,” the report said.

“The averages hide a great deal of variability in regions and sectors though,” said REC CEO Neil Carberry. “The Midlands and the North both saw strong performances for temporary and permanent roles, in sharp contrast with London and the South, with permanent hiring in London especially slow.”

Carberry added: “For policy makers, any return to growth will put strain on a labour market with embedded shortages – [last week’s] pro-election rather than pro-economy decision on immigration will exacerbate that. [Editor’s note: see today’s Analysis for more information.] 

“Any return to growth could drive domestically-generated inflation unless we adopt a proper plan for workforce capacity, embracing better welfare-to-work support, finally reforming the Apprenticeship Levy, funding Further Education properly and… support for school leavers.”

• Comment below on this story. Or let us know what you think by emailing us at [email protected] or tweet us to tell us your thoughts or share this story with a friend.

Social recruiting March/April 2024

Recruiters and staff continue to help charities. Here are some examples we’ve seen since the previous Recruiter

Lighter Side 8 May 2024

Helping employees overcome imposter syndrome

A new role can trigger ‘imposter syndrome’, the feeling of self-doubt experienced by over 60% of UK workers about their work accomplishments. They believe they don’t deserve their jobs or success or that they can never meet others’ expectations. As a result, they feel like imposters or frauds at the workplace – and it doesn’t matter how high you’ve risen in the organisation or if your achievements are staggering. In fact, it’s experienced commonly as we take on more responsibility.

8 May 2024
a headshot of a man smiling

Satori Partnership launches to better optimise operations for recruiters

Steve Carter has launched professional services consultancy Satori Partnership.

8 May 2024

Tips for recruiters to spot the double-jobbers

A fraud prevention boss is urging recruitment agencies to be vigilant amid a rise in cases of so-called ‘double jobbing’.

8 May 2024
Top