UK Unemployment Is Heading to 5.8% and Freelancers Eyeing Permanent Jobs Are Walking Into a Contracting Market
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More than half of UK freelancers have entertained the idea of returning to permanent employment, according to recent survey data, with 16.4% having considered it seriously and 1.9% already actively looking. The problem is that the permanent job market they might return to is deteriorating at the fastest pace since the pandemic. The ITEM Club, an independent economic think tank, forecasts UK unemployment peaking at 5.8% in the middle of next year, up from below 4% at the end of 2023, representing approximately 250,000 additional people without jobs. Businesses have already been pulling back on new hires while more people have entered the labour market, and the think tank warns that large-scale corporate layoffs, largely absent until now, are beginning to materialize.For freelancers weighing the perceived security of a permanent role against the uncertainty of self-employment, the data presents an uncomfortable reality.
The safety net they are considering falling back on is shrinking precisely when they would be trying to use it. The permanent job market is becoming more competitive, more skills-specific, and more output-focused at exactly the moment when unemployment is pushing more candidates into it. Freelancers who decide now is the time to return to employment will be entering a market where hundreds of thousands of redundant workers are simultaneously competing for a smaller pool of roles that require demonstrated results from day one rather than potential that can be developed over time.