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UK wage growth slows as jobs market cools

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Wage growth across Great Britain has slowed, as the jobs market cools and companie cut jobs.

The latest labour market data, just released, shows that annual growth in employees’ average earnings (excluding bonuses) slowed to 4.8% in May-July this year, down from 5% a month earlier.

With inflation rising in recent months (to 3.8% in July), this slowdown in earnings means households will be squeezed harder by the cost of living.

Pay rose faster in the public sector – up 5.6% per year – compared with 4.7% for the private sector, the Office for National Statistics reports.

The ONS also flags that company payrolls shrank, by an estimated 142,000 in the year between July 2024 and July 2025, a sign that companies have been cutting back on hiring due to economic uncertainty and the rise in employers’ national insurance rates.

The estimated number of vacancies in the UK fell by 10,000 to 728,000, in June to August, today’s data shows. That’s the 38th consecutive quarterly fall.

ONS director of economic statistics Liz McKeown says:

“The labour market continues to cool, with the number of people on payroll falling again, while firms also told us there were fewer jobs in the latest period.

“This weakness is reflected in a slight increase on the quarter in the unemployment rate. The number of vacancies also fell on the quarter, though the rate of decline appears to be slowing.

“Wage growth excluding bonuses edged down further in cash terms, though it remains strong by historic standards.”

Also coming up today….

Chancellor Rachel Reeves will host bosses of top US and UK financial firms in Downing Street on Tuesday morning as the government tries to highlight economic ties between the two countries at the start of Trump’s state visit.

The meeting, which will be jointly hosted by US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, will see senior bosses from BlackRock, Barclays and Blackstone gather in Whitehall as the chancellor seeks to secure further foreign investment that could help spur growth, and deliver positive headlines ahead of a challenging autumn budget in November.

The agenda

  • 7am BST: UK labour market data

  • 8am BST: Worldpanel’s UK supermarket inflation data

  • 11am BST: Israel’s Q2 GDP report

  • 1.30pm BST: US retail sales for August

  • 2.15pm BST: US industrial production data for August

  • 3pm BST: Parliament’s science committee to examine Merck’s decision to abandon the expansion of its UK operations.

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Key events

UK jobs data: political reaction

The UK’s new Work and Pensions Secretary, Pat McFadden, has spotted some bright spots in today’s labour market reports.

He points to a drop in the economic inactivity rate (people neither in work nor looking for a job), which dipped by 0.02 percentage points over the last quarter to 21.1%.

McFadden says:

“Today’s figures show signs of progress with economic inactivity and redundancies continuing to fall.

“But we must futureproof our workforce by giving people the opportunities and skills they need to secure the jobs of tomorrow.

“It is vital that our £240 million Get Britain Working plan is felt by people across the country, whether it’s through targeted support for young people entering the workforce, or joining up work, health and skills support.

“The true strength of the UK’s economy lies in the British people, which is why we are unlocking opportunity in every part of the country to drive forward economic growth under our plan for change.”

But Daisy Cooper, the Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesperson, said Labour had committed an act of “self sabotage” by pushing more people out of work.

Cooper added:

“[It has put] even more pressure on already stretched public services and leaving businesses scrambling just to keep the lights on.”

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