People aged between 16 and 24 are bearing the brunt of the UK’s employment crisis as Covid-19 continues to drive a shrinking labour market.
The country’s unemployment rate hit a two-year high in the three months to July, new Office for National Statistics figures show, reaching 4.1 per cent.
It makes the loss of the Job Retention Scheme – set to wind down next month – a looming crisis that The Big Issue is fighting through the Ride Out Recession Alliance, bringing together the most innovative ideas and experts to help keep people in work and in their homes during the recession.
In August, the number of people on payrolls in the UK was down roughly 695,000 compared to March this year – but despite rising redundancies, employment and economic activity are up.
However younger people have seen the biggest drop in employment, with 156,000 fewer 16-24-year-olds in jobs in July compared to when lockdown was implemented in Britain.
Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Susannah Streeter said: “Generation Z has been hit particularly hard by the economic fall out of the pandemic as the retail and hospitality sectors, which have taken such a battering, are often relied on to help school and university leavers find an entry-level job, and get started in the world of work.