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16 Boroughs in London have employment rate below UK average

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16 Boroughs in London have employment rate below UK average

When Britain leaves the EU a new regional policy is absolutely essential to lift economic growth and prosperity in every part of the region says GMB London

There are 16 London Boroughs that have an employment rate below the UK average of 74% according to a new study by GMB London of official employment data from the Office for National Statistics.

These are Kensington and Chelsea, Tower Hamlets, Barking and Dagenham, Brent, Westminster, Newham, Enfield, Camden, Hounslow, Kingston upon Thames, Redbridge, Islington, Barnet, Hackney, Greenwich and Harrow.

In Sutton, 82.4% of the population aged 16-64 are in employment, the highest in London. The next 5 are City of London with 82.1%, Lambeth with 81.9%, Wandsworth with 80.3%, Bromley with 79% and Richmond upon Thames with 78.9%.

By contrast the lowest are Kensington and Chelsea with only 64.5% of those aged 16-64 in employment, Tower Hamlets with 65.3%, Barking and Dagenham with 65.8%, Brent with 67.5% and Westminster with 68%.

The London employment rate is 73.8% and the overall UK figure is 74%. The region is the fifth highest in the UK behind the South East at 77.7%, South West at 77.6%, Eastern at 77.2% and the East Midlands at 74.7%.

The table below shows Employment numbers and rates for those aged 16-64 by London boroughs, ranked by employment rate compiled by GMB London region, see notes to editors for sources and definitions.

 

Annual Population Survey – April 2016-March 2017

   

Employment rate - aged 16-64

   

number

%

 

England

25,725,800

74.4

 

Great Britain

29,589,700

74.2

 

United Kingdom

30,395,200

74.0

       
 

London

4,428,500

73.8

rank

     

1

Sutton

106,800

82.4

2

City of London

6,800

82.1

3

Lambeth

201,700

81.9

4

Wandsworth

185,100

80.3

5

Bromley

160,600

79.0

6

Richmond upon Thames

101,800

78.9

7

Havering

122,900

78.3

8

Croydon

193,200

77.8

9

Merton

108,600

77.8

10

Lewisham

163,100

77.4

11

Hammersmith and Fulham

100,500

76.2

12

Bexley

119,400

76.0

13

Waltham Forest

141,200

75.6

14

Ealing

172,600

75.3

15

Haringey

146,700

74.7

16

Southwark

172,400

74.6

17

Hillingdon

147,600

74.2

18

Harrow

118,400

73.5

19

Greenwich

135,800

73.0

20

Hackney

144,600

72.8

21

Barnet

184,700

72.4

22

Islington

125,300

72.0

23

Kingston upon Thames

85,400

71.6

24

Redbridge

140,700

71.6

25

Hounslow

133,900

71.5

26

Camden

122,800

70.2

27

Enfield

150,400

70.1

28

Newham

164,900

68.7

29

Westminster

116,800

68.0

30

Brent

150,500

67.5

31

Barking and Dagenham

86,000

65.8

32

Tower Hamlets

147,400

65.3

33

Kensington and Chelsea

69,900

64.5

 

Warren Kenny, GMB London region secretary, said,

“Several areas of London’s economy need to be thoroughly regenerated to bring to the areas new well paid jobs.

“This regeneration should be part of a much needed wider regeneration in the regions of the UK. This will not happen by accident and requires a partnership between local and national government and between public and private sectors. This should be part of a new regional policy that should be given priority in the post Brexit economy.

“The people of the less prosperous areas have to demand that all elected political office holders in the area campaign for action from national and local government to lead the regeneration of the area to end the days of these areas being at the bottom of the UK employment rate league.

“GMB call on all political parties to lead the campaign for the gap between the areas with low employment rates and other parts of the country, including the parts of London with high employment rates, to be closed.

“GMB will also seek to end the two tier workforce in the public sector so that contractor's workers get the same terms and conditions as directly employed staff.

“Action is also needed to increase the bargaining power of lower paid workers. Employers threats and actions, like the recent sacking of shop stewards at Cineworld in London in the course of strike action on pay, is curtailing the rights of workers to join trades unions and to seek collective bargaining agreement to resist and reverse this transfer of income from labour to capital.

“This hostility is widespread and enjoys effective impunity. It is a major cause of growing inequality in the UK.

“So employers hostility is not only abusing the human rights of workers to join trades unions to hold down pay in favour of profits but it now also threatens consumer spending and increases the risk of a further recession. Dealing with this lack of bargaining power has to be part of the regeneration of the low employment rates in the less prosperous areas of the UK.

“When Britain leaves the EU a new regional policy is absolutely essential to lift economic growth and prosperity in every part of the region.”

ENDS

Contact: Gary Doolan on 07590 262 504; Tony Warr on 07710 631336; Shaun Graham on 07885 706556; GMB London Press Office on 0208 457 4143

Notes to editors

1) Source: Annual Population Survey from the Office for National Statistics, April 2016-March 2017. The Annual Population Survey is residence based and a continuous household survey covering the UK.

The data is for the employment numbers and rate of those aged 16-64.

Employment measures the number of people in work consisting of employees, self-employed people, unpaid family workers (those working in a family business not receiving a formal wage but benefit from profits of that business) and people on government-supported training and employment programmes (only those engaging in any form of work, work experience or work-related training who are not included in the employees or self-employed series).

The APS is the source recommended for employment-related statistics, such as estimates of the number of people in employment or unemployed.