Coronavirus: Young people ‘most likely to lose work’ in lockdown
Young people are most likely to have lost work or seen their income drop because of Covid-19, a report suggests.
More than one in three 18 to 24-year-olds is earning less than before the outbreak, research by the Resolution Foundation claims.
It said younger workers risk their pay being affected for years, while older staff may end up involuntarily retired.
The number of people in the UK claiming and receiving unemployment benefit soared last month.
The figure went up by 856,500 to 2.097 million in April, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.
Separate ONS figures showed UK unemployment rose by 50,000 to 1.35 million in the three months to March.
Jonathan Athow, from the ONS, said employment “held up well” in March, but hours worked “fell sharply” towards the end of the month – particularly in areas like hospitality and construction.
Speaking about the figures on BBC Breakfast, Work and Pensions Secretary Therese Coffey said “we won’t have a more detailed understanding for about another month”.
Young people tend to be hardest hit by economic slumps.
Around a quarter of 18 to 24-year-olds have been furloughed – meaning they do not work but their firms keep them on their books and the government covers 80% of their wages.
A further 9% have lost their jobs altogether – the highest figure out of all age groups.
Industries that traditionally employ younger staff such as pubs, restaurants and leisure centres have remained shut throughout the UK’s eight-week lockdown, as have many shops.
Employees across all age groups were found to be more likely to earn less than they did in January than earn more.
Those aged 35 to 44 were the least likely to have been furloughed or lost their jobs, with around 15% experiencing this since the outbreak began.
Ms Coffey told the BBC’s Today programme that the UK should be prepared for the unemployment rate to “increase significantly”.
She said there are still vacancies available in areas such as retail and agricultural work, but that opportunities will vary around the country.
The DWP is working with other departments to help people back into work, she added.
“That will also focus, I think, on younger people,” she said. “The longer that people are away from the workplace makes it, often, more challenging to get that dream career that they’re looking for.”
Asked about the claim that young people’s incomes could be scarred for years to come, she said: “I think it’s too early to say anything like that at all.”
The Resolution Foundation, which studies earnings of lower and middle income-workers, surveyed more than 6,000 UK adults at the beginning of May.
The Health Foundation, the charity which funded the research, says it was concerned that the current crisis is magnifying already-precarious employment conditions young people face.
However, the report found the scale of pay reductions during the crisis would have been greater were it not for the government’s job retention scheme.
The scheme covers 80% of workers’ pay up to £2,500 per month and was recently extended to October.
A quarter of the workforce, some 7.5 million people, are now covered by the arrangement, which has cost £14bn a month.
However, campaigners said it has made “no difference” to the thousands of people who initially fell through the cracks.
Last week, the chancellor warned it was “very likely” the UK is in a “significant recession”, as figures revealed the economy contracting at the fastest pace since the financial crisis.
Countries around the world are struggling with surges in unemployment due to the pandemic.
More than 36 million people are now filing for unemployment benefits in the US, representing almost a quarter of the American workforce.
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