Manufacturing jobs at lowest ebb since records began
Unemployment figures have reached an 11-year high, with jobs in the manufacturing sector suffering its worst rate since records began.
Figures from the Office of National Statistics (ONS) released today, for the three months to September 2008, put the numbers of unemployed at 1.82m, or 5.8%, with manufacturing jobs falling to 2.86m – the lowest since records began in 1978.
Experts predict that the national figure will exceed 2m within months.
The number of those claiming Job Seeker's Allowance also rose to its highest in seven years to 980,900, while the number of vacancies fell.
Unite urged the government to make jobs and homes the priorities for the forthcoming pre-Budget report.
Derek Simpson, joint general secretary of Unite, said: "Every single one of these job losses is a personal tragedy but also a real loss of skills and productivity to the UK economy.
"It is time once and for all to part company with the hard-faced economics and City gamblers that got us all into this mess in the first place."
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Comments
- 12 November 2008
The foundation of any country is manufacturing!
So we need all the energy in the manufacturing sector - just the same as China!
If you wish to know the future read history!
If you wish a free report on;
THE ROAD AHEAD - CREATE THE OPPORTUNITY
Industrial Market Review and Outlook for 2009
email colin@cavendish-mr.org.uk
Colin Thompson
Cavendish
www.cavendish-mr.org.uk
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