Close Menu
London Herald
  • UK
  • London
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Finance
  • Tech
What's Hot

Southeastern trains cancelled or replaced by buses this week

May 12, 2025

Leyton High Road BP petrol station stabbing: Man injured

May 12, 2025

Take a break beside the seaside with Just Go Holidays

May 12, 2025
London HeraldLondon Herald
Monday, May 12
  • UK
  • London
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Finance
  • Tech
London Herald
Home » UK jobs slowdown hits education and healthcare as spending cuts bite

UK jobs slowdown hits education and healthcare as spending cuts bite

Blake AndersonBy Blake AndersonMay 11, 2025 UK 3 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Stay informed with free updates

Simply sign up to the UK employment myFT Digest — delivered directly to your inbox.

A slowdown in the UK jobs market is hitting hiring in education and healthcare as government spending cuts bite, according to surveys that point to headcount reductions across the public sector. 

Business confidence is at its lowest on record, outside the Covid-19 pandemic, according to a quarterly report by the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development, which represents HR professionals, after increases in the minimum wage and payroll taxes took effect last month. 

In the private sector, the balance of employers expecting headcount to increase in the next three months was still positive, but by the slimmest margin in the survey’s 11-year history, except in 2020. 

In the public sector, employers expecting to cut headcount outnumbered those expecting to increase their staffing, with a net balance of minus 4.

The CIPD said the fall in private sector confidence was driven by large employers, and was sharpest in retail, which has been disproportionately affected by the wage and tax increases. Three in ten retailers expected headcount to fall in the next three months.

James Cockett, economist at the CIPD, said the figures showed that the government’s reform of workers’ rights would be “landing in a fundamentally different landscape to the one expected when it formed part of the Labour manifesto” last summer, urging ministers to calm business nerves by setting a clear timeline for the changes. 

But the survey suggests tight public sector budgets are now as much of an issue for the jobs market as business qualms about rising labour costs. 

After retail, non-compulsory education — including both universities and further education colleges — was the sector with the largest proportion of employers set to cut headcount.

About a quarter of employers in schools and pre-schools were also reducing their staffing, the CIPD said, as was one in five employers in healthcare. 

Meanwhile, a downbeat survey of recruiters, published on Monday by the Recruitment & Employment Confederation, showed permanent vacancies for nursing, medical and care staff dropped more sharply between March and April than vacancies in any other sector. 

The two reports follow a stark warning from NHS Providers, the membership body for NHS trusts, which said on Friday that more than a third of trusts were already cutting clinical posts in an attempt to balance their books, with a further 40 per cent considering job cuts. 

Teaching unions have also warned that many school heads are cutting staff numbers after being told they would have to fund any uplift in pay from their existing budgets. 

Research published last month by the Teacher Tapp app and SchoolDash, an education data analytics firm, found teacher recruitment was running well below levels seen in recent years because of “serious budgetary pressures” as well as falling pupil numbers in London.



Source link

Blake Anderson

Keep Reading

UK immigration debate ignores the real questions

Cobalt Holdings plans London IPO with Glencore taking 10% stake

Keir Starmer unveils migration curbs

peas — the pod of small things

Campaigners sue UK government to stop jet-part exports to Israel

UK national statistician job should be split, says government data adviser

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks
Latest Posts

Subscribe to News

Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

Advertisement
Demo

News

  • World
  • US Politics
  • EU Politics
  • Business
  • Opinions
  • Connections
  • Science

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

© 2025 London Herald.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Accessibility

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.