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Stubborn wage growth boosts likelihood of UK interest rate rise

Published 12/09/2023, 10:24
Updated 12/09/2023, 10:40
© Reuters.  Stubborn wage growth boosts likelihood of UK interest rate rise

Proactive Investors - The UK unemployment rate rose to 4.3%, in line with expectations, as the rise in interest rates continued to eat away at the UK economy.

The rate rose from 4.2% in the three months to June and was in line with FXStreet-cited market consensus.

But the data also showed growth in regular pay (excluding bonuses) was 7.8% in May to July, the same as the previous 3-month period and is the highest regular annual growth rate since comparable records began in 2001.

Annual growth in employees’ average total pay (including bonuses) was 8.5%, meaning in real terms, taking into account inflation, total pay rose on the year rose by 1.2%.

July's figures were higher than FXStreet-cited consensus, which had expected an unchanged reading from 8.2% in the previous three-month period.

This total growth rate is affected by the NHS and civil service one-off payments made in June and July, the ONS said.

Samuel Tombs at Pantheon Macroeconomics said: “The persistence of excessively vigorous wage growth in July probably means the MPC can’t stop raising Bank Rate at this month’s meeting, but the end of the tightening cycle is not far off now.”

“Labour market slack, however, is continuing to increase at a faster rate than the MPC’s expected last month’s Monetary Policy Report, consistent with wage growth slowing markedly towards the end of this year,” he felt.

“We still expect wage increases to slow soon, averaging 0.4% per month in the second half of this year, and for the MPC to hike Bank Rate by 25bp this month and then calls it quits, leaving it at 5.50% until starting to reduce it from Q2 2024 onwards.”

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But ING said "drill down and if you strip out the public sector, private sector pay barely increased in level terms between June and July."

"And if we look at the alternative wage data which is based on payroll figures (or PAYE), that actually fell in level terms for the second consecutive month," it pointed out.

Read more on Proactive Investors UK

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Latest comments

Defend the pound now, leave room to debase it later is the real game
Our severely bloated, wasteful and unproductive public sector are still the root of inflation now, just as they were during Covid money giveaway spending spree.
Correct, but they will strike for more, bunch of imbeciles!
What do they expect? Inflation will never turn negative to stop wage claims. Unless of course every firm in the UK ceases trading. But while the BoE keeps upping the interest rates it all adding to business costs which reflect in the prices they charge for goods and services. Wages will never catch up, even if inflation falls back to 2%. All that means is prices will rise 2% a year from what they are now. Lower paid workers will still continue to struggle so wage claims will have to continue just to narrow the gap between income and expenditure. Of course the BoE will try to hoodwink everyone into thinking everyone will be ok if inflation falls to 2%. It's their doing that caused inflation and they haven't a hope of bringing prices back down to what they were 2 years ago..only that they will keep going up but at a lesser rate. Put the BoE chiefs on National Minimum wage and see how long it takes them to ask for more money
lest noth forgoth that this data is census driven using minute sample sizes
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