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UK employers report weaker hiring and pay growth in July

UK employers report weaker hiring and pay growth in July

Business Times2 days ago
[LONDON] Hiring intentions by British businesses fell to their weakest since the Covid-19 pandemic and recruiters said starting pay was rising at the slowest pace in over four years, according to surveys on Monday which add to signs of a weakening jobs market.
With the Bank of England watching the jobs market closely, the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development said only 57 per cent of private sector employers planned to recruit staff over the next three months, the lowest since the start of 2021 though only slightly down from 58 per cent in the last quarterly survey.
The professional body for the human resources sector said higher employer social security charges introduced by finance minister Rachel Reeves and an increased minimum wage were hurting jobs, particularly in hospitality and social care.
Planned changes to employment law which are likely to make it harder to sack employees in their first two years in a job were also making businesses more reticent to hire younger, less experienced staff, CIPD economist James Cockett said.
Other business surveys have shown similar concerns, as well as broader headwinds from weak domestic demand and residual uncertainty for some exporters over US trade tariffs.
Official data due on Tuesday is likely to show the jobless rate in the three months to June held at 4.7 per cent, close to a four-year high, according to a Reuters poll of economists who will also be watching to see if pay growth slows as the BoE expects.
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Four of nine BoE policymakers opposed its quarter-point interest rate cut to 4 per cent last week and they are likely to need further convincing that domestic inflation pressures are easing.
CIPD members expected to raise pay by a median 3 per cent over the coming year, unchanged from the previous five quarters.
Separately on Monday, the Recruitment and Employment Confederation said growth in starting salaries in July was the weakest since March 2021 while pay for temporary staff grew by the least in five months.
'Economic uncertainty, the complexities of AI adoption and global headwinds are all weighing on business planning,' said Jon Holt, group chief executive at accountancy firm KPMG which sponsors the REC survey.
REC said higher payroll costs and weak confidence contributed to a steep fall in permanent appointments in July. REUTERS
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SG60: Reading between the lines of the Draft Master Plan 2025
SG60: Reading between the lines of the Draft Master Plan 2025

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SG60: Reading between the lines of the Draft Master Plan 2025

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Even as it tackles hard economic questions, the Draft Master Plan 2025 doesn't lose sight of softer, human-scale priorities. Singapore's urban and economic planning has long been pragmatic, but the Draft Master Plan 2025 signals something new: boldness. In response to shifting global and domestic fundamentals, the plan reframes land use through emerging tools such as polycentric gateway corridors, and a more agile, layered approach to decentralisation. This isn't a wholesale reinvention, but a quiet recalibration, adapting Singapore's planning ethos to meet an era of slower growth, more complex trade-offs, and heightened geopolitical uncertainty. Decentralisation under pressure The once-ambitious model of decentralising offices beyond the Central Business District (CBD) is slowing. 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SG60: The future of Singapore's economy
SG60: The future of Singapore's economy

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time3 hours ago

  • Straits Times

SG60: The future of Singapore's economy

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox To remain a leading global hub, the Republic must double down on targeted policy innovation, societal adaptability and visionary leadership Singapore has a long history of transformation. As a small island nation of six million people, its economic ascent has been propelled by strategic location, good governance and pragmatic policymaking. As Singapore stands on the threshold of a new economic era, the central question is: What must we do today to thrive tomorrow? Over the next decade, the global landscape will be shaped by rapid technological advancement, climate change, demographic shifts, geo-economic fragmentation, and geopolitical polarisation. To remain a leading global hub and a resilient, vibrant society, Singapore must double down on targeted policy innovation, societal adaptability and visionary leadership. A legacy of reinvention Singapore has a long history of transformation. 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Workforce Singapore and tripartite partners should coordinate to deliver stackable skill credentials, apprenticeship programmes and career conversion programmes that offer portable skills across sectors. Protecting displaced workers and ensuring that young graduates have meaningful pathways into the new economy are essential for inclusive growth. Leveraging green growth as a strategic advantage The global climate change agenda is not just a moral imperative, but a strategic opportunity for Singapore to lead in green growth. Far from being a compliance exercise, the green transition is a source of innovation, investment and long-term competitiveness. As countries impose carbon pricing, border adjustment taxes, and stricter environmental, social and governance (ESG) mandates, early movers such as Singapore can gain significant strategic advantages. Singapore should aim to be the regional hub for carbon services, including carbon credit trading, emissions verification, and green finance. 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US Vice President Vance's English getaway stirs up local opposition
US Vice President Vance's English getaway stirs up local opposition

Straits Times

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US Vice President Vance's English getaway stirs up local opposition

People attend the \"Vance not welcome party\" protest, organised by Everybody Hates Elon and Stop Trump Coalition, as U.S. Vice President JD Vance spends his holiday nearby, in Charlbury, Cotswolds, Britain, August 12, 2025. REUTERS/Toby Melville CHARLBURY, England - U.S. Vice President JD Vance's working holiday in Britain was met with dismay by some locals on Tuesday, who gathered to register their disapproval of both his politics and the turmoil he has brought to their quiet corner of the English countryside. Vance has mixed work with leisure while in Britain, staying first with foreign minister David Lammy at the Chevening estate in Kent - where the two held a formal bilateral meeting after a spot of fishing - before moving on to the hamlet of Dean in Oxfordshire, in the picturesque Cotswolds. On Tuesday, several dozen people, including activists from the Stop Trump Coalition, gathered in the nearby town of Charlbury to stage what they called a "Not Welcome Party". They posed with cake and signs including pro-Palestinian slogans and messages saying "Go Home." A van showing an unflattering manipulated image of a bald Vance drove around Charlbury. "We want to show our feelings, hopefully some of it will get through to Vance and the American press and to Ukraine, so people know what we stand for," said Brian Murray, 65, a retired tour guide. "The fact he is in our backyard gives us a great opportunity to have our voices heard." Vance will meet on Tuesday evening with Robert Jenrick, a source in the opposition Conservative Party said. Jenrick was runner-up in the Conservative leadership contest last year, and is widely considered next in line for the job if it becomes available. The Telegraph newspaper said Vance would also meet Nigel Farage, the leader of the right-wing Reform UK party. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Luxury items seized in $3b money laundering case handed over to Deloitte for liquidation Singapore MyRepublic customers air concerns over broadband speed after sale to StarHub Singapore Power switchboard failure led to disruption in NEL, Sengkang-Punggol LRT services: SBS Transit Singapore NEL and Sengkang-Punggol LRT resume service after hours-long power fault Business Ninja Van cuts 12% of Singapore workforce after 2 rounds of layoffs in 2024 Singapore Hyflux investigator 'took advantage' of Olivia Lum's inability to recall events: Davinder Singh Singapore Man who stabbed son-in-law to death in Boon Tat Street in 2017 dies of heart attack, says daughter Singapore Man who stalked woman blasted by judge on appeal for asking scandalous questions in court Vance has developed a warm friendship with Labour's Lammy, officials said, with the two bonding over their difficult childhoods and shared Christian faith. Long a destination of the British elite - former British Prime Minister David Cameron lives in Dean - the Cotswolds is also becoming increasingly popular with wealthy Americans, some of whom moved to the region following the election win of President Donald Trump last year. TV personality Ellen DeGeneres has cited the election result as the reason behind her full-time relocation to the area. Around Charlbury, motorcades roared along the narrow country lanes and cordons blocked off roads to Dean, rendering it inaccessible. While Tuesday's protest was unlikely to disrupt the vice president's trip, for some locals, Vance's politics and the disruption were too much to swallow. "It's a massive intrusion and it's not just the fact our lives are disrupted but it's who he is," said Jonathan Mazower, the head of communications for NGO Survival International, who owns one of Dean's 15 homes. "I feel and many others feel we can't allow someone like that to come into our village and not say something publicly against it." REUTERS

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