UK reaction: Looser labour market conditions point to further cut

KEY POINTS
Employment rose by an above-consensus 373K in the three months to August, markets had expected a 250K increase
The unemployment rate ticked down to 4.0%, from 4.1% in July, below expectations for it to remain unchange
The LFS data can’t be trusted, though, because of the ongoing sampling issues. Other measures, including the vacancy and PAYE data, point to softer conditions
The claimant count measure rose by 27.9K in September, above August’s 23.7K increase
The ex-bonus measure of average weekly earnings slowed to 4.9%, from 5.1%, in line with the consensus
We think the Bank of England will see the latest labour market data as a step in the right direction, despite the further tick down in the unemployment rate
We continue to see a further 25bp cut in November, leaving Bank Rate at 4.75% by year-end
Note a tighter outlook for fiscal policy in the upcoming Budget may force the Bank to cut more aggressively in 2025

The latest labour market data point to an additional cut at the Bank of England’s meeting in November. The Labour Force Survey data showed a chunky 373K increase in employment in the three months to August and the unemployment rate edged down again to 4.0%, lower than in the previous three months and the level this time last year. Ongoing sampling issues, however, mean the data are unreliable and should be taken with a large pinch of salt. Note the survey reached an average of 88.5K individuals with a response rate to 42.8% (around 38k respondents), whereas in H1 2024, those figures were 53.1K and 17.6% (around 9k respondents), respectively.

Other measures continue to point to looser conditions. The number of vacancies, for instance, fell for the 27th consecutive period in the three months to September. And the PAYE measure of employee numbers was broadly unchanged in September – it fell by 15K on the month – after a drop of 35K in August, the largest since the early stages of the pandemic. The ONS also noted that year-over-year growth in both the Workforce Jobs – a measure based on business surveys – and the PAYE measures has slowed significantly over the past 18 months or so. The KPMG/REC Report on Jobs survey, meanwhile, suggested that some firms were putting hiring decisions on pause until after the Budget on October 30th, due to concerns over potential tax changes.

Likely most important for the BoE, though, will be the ongoing deceleration in wage growth. Average weekly earnings ex. bonuses fell to 4.9% - its slowest pace since June 2022 – from 5.1% in the three months to July, driven by declines in both public and private sector pay regular pay; the former slowed to 5.2%, from 5.7%, and the latter to 4.8%, from 5%. Total earnings – which include bonuses – fell further to 3.8% - over a three-and-a-half-year low - from 4.1%, though the disparity largely reflected base effects, given NHS workers and civil service workers were given one-off bonus payments across the summer in 2023. On a 3-m annualised basis, total earnings grew by 2.7% and ex-bonus payments by 4.4%.

On balance, the latest labour market data should convince a majority of MPC members in November that enough slack is developing to support a gradual deceleration in wage growth back to more sustainable levels over the next year or so. Note the BoE’s Decision Maker Panel survey showing businesses expect wage growth to be around 4% in 12 months’ time. In addition, we expect a renewed decline in CPI inflation in September – released tomorrow morning – to 1.8%, with services CPI inflation slowing to 5.1%. Both point to one further cut in Bank Rate in November. Further ahead, the key risk remains the Budget; if the Chancellor tightens fiscal policy materially in order to close the so-called fiscal “black hole” then the BoE may be forced to tighten more aggressively to offset the hit to growth. 

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