City Comment: Time to look forward, not back

It is more than four years on now from the banking crisis yet we are still arguing about who did or didn’t do what, as though we were in the school playground. Isn’t it about time that we just accepted where we stand, stop trying to play the blame game and got on with the task of recovery?
Fri, 4 May 2012 | By Sue Dodd, director, Agile Intelligence
It is more than four years on now from the banking crisis yet we are still arguing about who did or didn’t do what, as though we were in the school playground. Isn’t it about time that we just accepted where we stand, stop trying to play the blame game and got on with the task of recovery?   

The Bank of England Governor just recently offered his analysis, including blaming the Bank itself and poor regulation. Globally it may be a challenge to produce effective regulation but the long-term fallout from this crisis coupled with the sovereign debt issues in the Eurozone demand that we address all the issues urgently. Shortage of finance for SMEs continues to choke growth potential. So, apart from this what else is holding back UK recovery?On the economy, the Eurozone is an ongoing crisis – social unrest may wax and wane but the debt problems will definitely be re-visited by the financial markets. Any period of calm should be used to shore up defences and, whilst economic projections for the UK have to assume the status quo, a Eurozone break-up with all its consequences remains a possibility.

Back to the UK, following last month’s disappointing Q1 GDP figures some perspective on a brief double-dip recession is needed with the media impact more dangerous than the event itself especially since there are still two more revisions due and these figures were also seriously dragged down by poor construction data. The real key to recovery is business confidence, best indicated by surveys and investment levels. The Q4 3.3% reversal in investment occurred amidst deep concerns surrounding the Eurozone – Q1 should begin to provide more normal readings. However, the economic news really is a mix of positives and negatives. Retail sales remain sluggish, government spending is under long-term constraints but private sector growth is just being seen in Services, whilst Manufacturing has so far weathered the Eurozone storm remarkably well. Inflation, despite oil prices, seems relatively benign. Unemployment has even retreated slightly. What does all this mean for recruitment?

Recent results confirm diverse fortunes with companies such as Hudson in the UK suffering from the Q1 financials slowdown while sectors such as engineering see expansion. Reports from some multi-nationals that performance improved as Q1 progressed, although perhaps company centric, could be signs that the sharp increase in temporary employees in the UK is once again driving recruitment sales if not forward yet then less quickly backwards. Nevertheless it will continue to be a slow, often painful and bumpy economic recovery and this will be mirrored in recruitment. Strategic positioning will mean everything.

Sue Dodd, director, Agile Intelligence

Recruitment industry can be part of welfare reform discussion

The Department of Work and Pensions has this week unveiled a consultation on proposals to move away from fixed cash benefit system towards tailored support.

Legislation 30 April 2024

IBM survey finds UK business leaders expect 25% of workforce need to retrain

An IBM survey has found that a large number of UK respondents expect roughly 25% of the workforce would need retraining as a result of artificial intelligence (AI).

30 April 2024

APSCo launches manifesto to beat the skills crisis

The Association of Professional Staffing Companies (APSCo) has launched its manifesto, calling on political parties to boost the UK’s economic growth by strengthening the labour market.

New to Market 30 April 2024

UK fraud prevention service reveals rise in dishonest conduct by new recruits

Data sent to Cifas has revealed an increase in new recruits committing dishonest conduct against employers.

30 April 2024
Top