Review of the UK Jobs Market – May 2025

Review of the UK Jobs Market – May 2025

Welcome to our Review of the UK Jobs Market for May. Each month, we share market insight on the state of the UK jobs market.

You can either read our short blog, or see our infographic.

The main findings were:

    • Candidate supply expands at sharpest rate since end of 2020
    • Demand for staff falls at softest rate in eight months
    • Pay growth strengthens but remains below historical trends

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Staff Appointments

May sees further marked fall in permanent staff appointments

May signalled a decline in the number of people placed into permanent jobs for the thirty-second month in a row. The rate of contraction was sharp and slightly quicker than that seen in April. However the reduction remained slower that at the turn of the year. Weaker employer confidence around the economic outlook and concerns over costs were all linked to the latest drop in permanent staff hiring.

Temp billings decline at softest rate in six months

Recruitment consultancies across the UK indicated that temp billings declined again in May, thereby extending the current period of contraction to 11 months. Though solid, the rate of reduction eased for the gourth straigh month to the lowest since last November. According to anecdotal evidence, billings fell as demand for short-term staff had weakened amid subdued market confidence and efforts to limit costs.

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Vacancies

Vacancies fall at slowest pace since last September

May signalled a further reduction in overall demand for workers. Vacancies have now fallen in each of the past 19 months, Though solid, the latest decline was the softest recorded since last September.

Latest data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) signalled a further decline in vacancies across the UK in the three months to April. At 761,000, the number of open roles was down nearly 15% compared to the same period a year ago and the lowest in four years. The number of vacancies was just over 4% below the pre-pandemic level.

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Staff Availability

Rapid improvement in the availability of permanent staff

May experienced an increase in the supply for workers for permanent role for the twenty-seventh successive month. Furthermore the rate of growth was rapid and the most pronounced since Decemer 2020. Redundancies were the main driver of higher staff supply, according to recruiters, while fewer job opportunities were also cited as having pushed up candidate numbers

Upturn in temporary candidate numbers gathers pace

The number of candidates available for short-term roles across the UK continued to ries midway through the second quarter. Notably, the rate of expansion was the joint-quickest for nearly four-and-a-half years (on a par with October 2024). Recruiters frequently mentioned that job losses and lower demand for staff had increase the pool of available workers in May.

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Pay Pressures

Starting salary inflation picks up to nine-month high

As has been the case since March 2021, average starting salaries increased during May. The rate of pay growth improved to a nine-month high and was solid overall. That said, the pae of inflation remained below the historical average. Higher starting salaries were general attributed to competition for high quality candidates.

Strongest increase in temp wages for one year

Temp pay rates continued to increase across the UK in May, Thereby stretching the current period of wage growth to eight months. There were a number of reports that stronger than average increases in the national minimum and living wage rates continued to exert upward pressure on short-term pay.

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Source: KPMG and REC UK Report on Jobs 13th June 2025

 

Information, Intelligence, Job Outlook, Trends 13 June 2025 Written by Marketing