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Reeves's influence on the workplace is proving toxic

The Independent

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June 11, 2025

If you make hiring people more expensive, fewer people get hired. That might seem a bit like saying grass is green”, but it appears someone forgot to tell the chancellor.

- JAMES MOORE CHIEF BUSINESS COMMENTATOR

Reeves's influence on the workplace is proving toxic

We’re now living with the results. The latest labour market update from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) shows job vacancies took a swan dive between March and May, declining by 63,000 to 736,000.

The number of available openings has been in decline for quite some time, but that is a particularly big fall. It coincides with – and clearly shows the effect of – the chancellor’s decision to increase employer national insurance contributions (NICs), which came into effect at the beginning of April.

No wonder that 77 per cent of businesses with more than 10 employees told the ONS in late May 2025 that staffing costs – which include wages, bonuses, national insurance and pension contributions – increased over the last three months.

When the tax rise was announced, several big employers gave a warning that the inevitable consequence would be fewer hires. Probably lay-offs, too. “Feedback from our vacancies survey suggests some firms may be holding back from recruiting new workers or replacing people when they move on,” said Liz McKeown, director of economic statistics at the ONS.

This used to be called “natural wastage”. If, when, employers decide they need to cut their labour costs, it is much better to do so by not replacing people when they leave than it is by big, expensive and disruptive redundancy programmes. But make no mistake: they might still be coming.

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