Unemployment could taken SEVEN YEARS to fall back to pre-coronavirus levels according to experts

Unemployment could taken SEVEN YEARS to fall back to pre-coronavirus levels according to experts who warn of a ‘big labour market shock’ despite job protection schemes costing billions

  • Economists predict ‘really high unemployment for the foreseeable future’ 
  • This is despite programmes like multi-billion-pound Job Retention Scheme 
  • They faced MPs in the Treasury Committee today to discuss coronavirus fallout
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

UK unemployment could take the best part of a decade to return to pre-coronavirus levels despite the Government pumping billions of pounds into job retention schemes, MPs were warned today. 

Leading economists told the Treasury Committee they predict ‘really high unemployment for the foreseeable future’ as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

This is despite programmes like the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (JRS), which has pumped billions of pounds into trying to prevent widespread laying off of staff.

Torsten Bell, chief executive of the Resolution Foundation, told ministers at the Government’s Treasury Committee that households should prepare for a ‘big labour market shock’.

He said there had been  ‘way too much’ talk of a ‘v-shaped recovery’ – where GDP returns to previous levels relatively quickly.

And he warned that if unemployment was to hit 10 per cent, it could take the UK seven years to recover back to pre-pandemic levels of around 4 per cent.

He said: ‘I think we will see some spark back in activity as we leave the hard lockdown. But in terms of employment growth, the reasons to be nervous are that the sectors which are generally the quickest to bring people back to work are hospitality and retail.

‘They were a big part of bringing people back into work in the financial crisis but that won’t be so easy this time.  

Torsten Bell, chief executive of the Resolution Foundation, told ministers at the Government’s Treasury Committee that households should prepare for a ‘big labour market shock’

He warned that if unemployment was to hit 10 per cent, it could take the UK seven years to recover back to pre-pandemic levels, with hospitality and retail the worst hit

He warned that if unemployment was to hit 10 per cent, it could take the UK seven years to recover back to pre-pandemic levels, with hospitality and retail the worst hit

 ‘We expect really high unemployment for the foreseeable future.

‘Next year we will be dealing with unemployment when we thought we would be dealing with record employment and we will debating tax rises over the first half of this decade.’

He was one of a panel of economists answering questions from the committee about the predicted impact of the virus, support measures and where further focus might be needed. 

Paul Johnson, director at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, also told the committee that there are ‘a lot of gaps’ in the state’s coronavirus financial support package.

He said: ‘Some of these gaps are big. There are possibly as many as two million company owner-managers, 650,000 or so self-employed people who set up since April 2019, 200,000 self-employed earning over £50,000 and others working outside the scheme.

‘It was a very broad and rough-and-ready scheme in terms of providing income replacement.’

On Tuesday, the Treasury revealed that Government-backed schemes have paid out £34.9 billion to around 830,000 businesses up and down the country.

By far the most popular were the bounce-back loans, designed to quickly funnel up to £50,000 to small firms, which have seen nearly £24 billion paid to more than 782,000 companies.

However, Giles Wilkes, senior fellow at the Institute for Government, warned that he believed the rapid pace that bounce-back loans were handed out is an ‘incredible red flag’.

He said: ‘£20 billion went straight out and there’s talk about absolutely massive bad debts.

‘It’s very rare for state money to be drawn out without it meaning something has gone slightly wrong and in this case it must be lack of commercial scrutiny that the commercial sector has had to apply to these loans.

‘It’s hard to see how these would be gathered back in.’

Meanwhile, Dr Gemma Tetlow, chief economist at the Institute for Government, said the economy faces ‘radical uncertainty’, appealing for more clarity from the Government over how the virus is impacting certain sectors.

She said: ‘The thing the Government could be more transparent about is the spread of the disease and transmission, and what parts of the economy it would therefore be able to open up when.

‘While there is uncertainty about disease transmission it could be clearer about how it interprets that to how areas are reopened.’