LONDON: Britain’s jobless rate is likely to stay close to its pre-crisis low this year, as employment remains resilient following the Brexit vote, according to a Bank of England policymaker.
Michael Saunders, an external member of the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee, said recent economic growth had been “stronger than expected”, a factor that made it “quite possible” that the unemployment rate would “stay below 5pc this year” and remain close to its current 11-year low of 4.8pc.
However, the former Citi economist said shifts in the labor market since the financial crisis suggested that pay growth was likely to remain “comfortably below” pre-crisis levels of around 4pc for the “next few years”.
Speaking at the Resolution Foundation, Saunders said trends over the past five years suggested the jobless rate would need to fall to around 4pc in order to lift pay growth back to pre-crisis levels.
This suggests the “natural” rate of unemployment, or the rate consistent with stable inflation, was now closer to 4pc than during the pre-crisis period, he said.
The Bank of England’s Inflation Report in November showed that policymakers expect the jobless rate to rise to 5.4pc by the end of the year.
Saunders cited several factors that had contributed to the recent weakness in pay growth beyond low levels of inflation, including a rise in “less secure forms of work” and relatively high levels of under-employment, such as those in part-time roles would prefer to work in a full-time job.
These trends could become more common if economic growth slows rather than a rise in unemployment.
A rise in inward migration had also put downward pressure on pay growth, particularly in the context of low jobless rates, Saunders said, in areas such as London and the South East.
Increasing numbers of people going to university was also likely to boost employment and keep the jobless rate down, he said, while rising life expectancy and improved health would keep more people in work for longer.
Separate Bank of England data showed credit scoring on unsecured lending products such as personal loans “were reported to have loosened” in the final quarter of the year.
“Given mounting attention on the current strength of unsecured consumer borrowing, the Bank of England may well be perturbed to see that there was a loosening of credit standards for unsecured lending other than credit cards,” said Howard Archer, an economist at IHS Global Insight.
Bank policymakers stressed that, while rapid growth in unsecured credit warranted close monitoring, total credit growth, including mortgages and the share of households using a large share of their income to service debts remained well below pre-crisis levels.