Strong UK pay growth puts interest rate cut path at risk
Wages in the UK have grown faster than expected, official figures show, complicating the prospects of an interest rate cut by the Bank of England (BoE) in June.
Annual pay growth excluding bonuses averaged 6% between January and March, unchanged from last month, according to figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
Including bonuses, pay growth came in at 5.7%, also unchanged from last month.
Economists had been expecting declines in both readings. The BoE is monitoring for any signs that Britain's still strong wage growth could revive high inflation.
Real pay increased to 2.4% after taking inflation into account, which was the highest since the three months to August 2021.
Pay grew by 6.0% excluding bonuses, or 5.7% including bonuses, in the year to January to March 2024, remaining relatively strong.
Read Average weekly earnings in Great Britain ➡️ https://t.co/EeT6Xc2RIp pic.twitter.com/67q2XoBxTA— Office for National Statistics (ONS) (@ONS) May 14, 2024
The Bank of England voted to leave interest rates on hold last week but suggested that progress on key pieces of data, including wage growth, could pave the way for cuts to begin in June.
“A change in Bank Rate in June is neither ruled out nor a fait accompli,” Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank said after last week’s decision.
Private sector regular pay — a key metric for the BoE — eased slightly to 5.9% from 6.0% in the three months to February.
Read more: Bank of England holds interest rates but hints at summer cut
"Earnings growth in cash terms remains high, with the recent falls in the rate now levelling off while, with inflation falling, real pay growth remains at its highest level in well over two years," ONS director of economic statistics, Liz McKeown, said.
The Bank of England is less likely to cut interest rates in June after the latest employment figures, economists have warned.
Ashley Webb, UK economist at Capital Economics, said: "While the further easing in regular private sector pay growth in March suggests that wage pressures faded a bit faster than the Bank of England expected, broader measures of wage growth are probably still a bit too strong for the Bank’s liking.
"At the margin, this may make the Bank a bit more uneasy about first cutting interest rates in June."
Not the type of data you want to see from UK pay & wages to support a June interest rate cut. The official measure has moved higher to 5.7% YoY (5.6% prev.) whilst the timelier payroll data is up 7.0% YoY (median) in April; +4.9% (mean). Whilst this should moderate as one-off… pic.twitter.com/dhWkNXDT1l
— Simon French (@Frencheconomics) May 14, 2024
Unemployment, meanwhile, rose to 4.3%, compared to the previous estimate of 4.2%. Another 166,000 people become unemployed in the quarter, taking the total out of work and looking for a job to 1.486 million.
Vacancies also fell, down by 26,000 to 898,000 in the three months to April.
"We continue to see tentative signs that the jobs market is cooling, with both employment from our household survey and the number of workers on payroll showing falls in the latest periods," McKeown said.
"At the same time the steady decline in the number of job vacancies has continued for a twenty-second consecutive month, although numbers remain above pre-pandemic levels.
"With unemployment also increasing, the number of unemployed people per vacancy has continued to rise, approaching levels seen before the onset of COVID-19," she added.
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As real pay high its highest level in more than two years, chancellor Jeremy Hunt said: “This is the tenth month in a row that wages have risen faster than inflation, which will help with the cost of living pressures on families.
“While we are dealing with some challenges in our labour supply, including pandemic impacts, as our reforms on childcare, pensions tax reform and welfare come online I am confident we will start to increase the number of people in work.”
Watch: Bank of England holds rate at 16-year high, signals looming cut
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