The United Kingdom’s unemployment rate has climbed to its highest level since mid-2021, reaching 4.6% in the three months leading up to April, according to data released on Tuesday by the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
This marks a slight uptick from 4.5% in the first quarter, signaling growing strain on the UK’s labour market as businesses navigate rising domestic taxes and international trade pressures.
Economic Pressure Mounts
The rise in unemployment coincides with key economic shifts, including a business tax increase introduced in the Labour government’s first budget last October. Further compounding the challenge is the imposition of a 10% tariff on UK exports by the United States in April, impacting the manufacturing and export sectors particularly hard.
“We continue to see weakening in the labour market,” said Liz McKeown, Director of Economic Statistics at the ONS. “Our vacancies survey suggests many firms are delaying recruitment or not replacing staff when they leave.”
The report also highlighted a drop in the number of workers on payroll and a slowing pace of wage growth—a sign of cooling economic momentum.
Impact on Monetary Policy
The figures are expected to play a significant role in shaping the Bank of England’s interest rate decisions in the months ahead. With inflation gradually easing and overall economic activity softening, economists anticipate that the central bank will continue to adopt a more accommodative stance.
“With payrolls falling, the unemployment rate climbing, and wage growth easing, we are more confident in our projection that the Bank of England will reduce interest rates further than currently anticipated,” said Ruth Gregory, Deputy Chief UK Economist at Capital Economics.
The Bank of England last cut its benchmark interest rate in May by 0.25 percentage points, bringing it to 4.25%. Analysts now forecast deeper cuts—potentially down to 3.50% by next year—to stimulate economic recovery.
Outlook
As the UK faces a complex mix of domestic fiscal tightening and external trade pressures, policymakers will likely need to balance inflation control with employment support measures to stabilize the economy.
