COMMENTARY COVERSHEET

Economics commentary number: HL Number 3

        

Title of Extract:                             Sharp rise in unemployment as

                                                       financial crisis hits job markets.                

Source of extract:                          Guardian.co.uk

Date of extract:                              15/10/08

Word count:                                   677 words

Date the commentary was written: 06/10/08

Sections of the syllabus to which the commentary relates: Section                

                                                                                                                 

Candidate name:                             Atin Garg  

Candidate number:                          

Commentary Extract

Sharp rise in unemployment as financial crisis hits jobs market

British unemployment today posted its biggest rise since the country's last recession 17 years ago as the financial crisis filtered through to the jobs market.

Official figures showed unemployment measured by International Labour Organisation (ILO) standards rose by 164,000 in the three months to August from the previous quarter to stand at 1.79 million. The rise took the jobless rate up half a percentage point to 5.7%, also the biggest jump since July 1991.

"These numbers are truly horrendous and much worse than I had feared," said David Blanchflower, a labour market expert and member of the Bank of England's monetary policy committee.

He told guardian.co.uk his earlier prediction that unemployment would rise to 2 million by Christmas now looked conservative. "Unemployment will be above 2 million by Christmas. I am particularly worried at the 56,000 rise in the number of young unemployed people. These are school leavers who are unable to get a job or claim benefits, which is why the claimant count has not risen even faster than it has," he said.

The number of Britons out of work and claiming jobless benefits rose by 31,800 last month to 939,000, the eighth monthly increase in a row, and August's rise was revised higher to 35,700. The City had expected a 35,000 increase for September.

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This so-called claimant count measure is always lower than the broader, internationally recognised ILO measure which includes people not claiming benefits, because some unemployed people are not entitled to claim benefits, or choose not to do so.

The rise took the claimant count jobless rate up to 2.9%, its highest level since January 2007.

The prime minister, Gordon Brown, responded to the figures this morning by pledging the government would do everything it could to create jobs in the UK economy, which is teetering on the brink of recession.

The government also announced today it was making ...

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