British businesses are ‘struggling to recruit as EU workers stay away’

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Firms are struggling to recruit staff after a steep fall in the number of people coming to Britain from the European Union, a report has found.

Some 40 per cent of employers had found it harder to fill vacancies in the past 12 months, the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) found.

However, it also said a tighter labour market was boosting wages for some.

It follows warnings of shortages in sectors such as health and hospitality since Britain voted to leave the EU.

Quoting official figures, the CIPD said the number of EU-born workers in Britain increased by just 7,000 between the first quarters of 2017 and 2018.

This follows a rise of 148,000 in the same period in 2016-2017.

The human resources industry body said the 95 per cent drop had worsened existing labour shortages, creating a “supply shock”. Sectors that rely on non-UK labour have been badly hit, including IT, transport and storage and construction.

It surveyed British employers and found the number of applicants per vacancy had dropped at every skill level – low, medium and high – since last summer.

Respondents said they received an average of 20 applicants for the last low-skilled vacancy they tried to fill, compared to 24 in summer 2017 and 25 in autumn 2015.

For every high skilled vacancy, there were six applicants versus eight last summer.

Labour shortages typically push up salaries, but at a time of record employment, UK wage growth has remained weak, with some blaming low productivity rates.

According to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), wage growth slipped to 2.7% from 2.8% in the three months to May, despite unemployment falling to 4.2%, its joint lowest since 1975.

Higher wages?

However, the CIPD’s research found the shortage of candidates was starting to push up salaries at some firms.

More than half of employers who had found it harder to recruit in the last 12 months said they had increased starting salaries in response.

And among organisations that found it tougher to retain staff, over half had put up wages, particularly for their most valued workers.