City sees 50% fewer jobs and job seekers halve in two years

Morgan McKinley has released its London Employment Monitor looking at city hiring for financial services from January to March 2019.

Though the first quarter of 2019 saw an increase in both jobs and job seekers, a deeper dive into the data shows that the city jobs market has shrunk with jobs and job seekers dropping year-on-year to half the figures for 2017. The contraction is a result of years of Brexit related confusion that has left businesses and job seekers unwilling and unable to take risks.

Morgan McKinley’s data corresponds to findings by a number of groups, including IHS Markit’s PMI survey which found that service sector growth ground almost to a halt in January, with businesses reticent about taking any risks. BDO’s Business Trends Report found that with a no-deal Brexit being the legal default outcome of the current stalemate, business confidence is crippled.

Hakan Enver, Managing Director, Morgan McKinley Financial Services, commented,

We closed 2018 with a dramatically poor jobs market, because it’s become virtually impossible for businesses to grow here, so we started 2019 on the back foot. We have under half the jobs and under half the job seekers we had at this time in 2017. The inability of the government to reach consensus on a Brexit deal has crushed confidence among City employers. Even with all the uncertainty of the last few years, there was always an assumption that come 29th March 2019, we would have some answers. Yet here we are, still waiting.

With the Brexit deadline having been extended till the 31st October—the stress on businesses is showing no sign of letting up. The government had over two years to do its homework and complete the assignment. Right before the deadline, they finally decide to try to work with the opposition to protect the people, instead of their own political power? They didn’t do the homework, they didn’t complete the assignment and now they’re asking for one extension after the other as jobs continue to flow out of London with Dublin being by far the biggest beneficiary, followed by Luxembourg, Paris, Frankfurt, and Amsterdam. It’s astonishing. For the bigger banks, 29th March was the deadline – there are no extensions. They have rolled out their Brexit plans and are deftly deploying staff and other resources to key EU locations. It’s the smaller firms that are now being hit hardest, as they have fewer resources with which to plan and adapt.

Britain’s bullish technology sector shows first signs of shrinking

Britain’s technology sector—which intersects closely with the financial services sector—remains the envy of Europe, having earned £2.5 billion in new investments in 2018 according to London & Partners and PitchBook. However, it also saw its lowest rate of growth in three years.

Hakan Enver comments,

Financial services and technology jobs were the crown jewels of the UK economy attracting the best and the brightest to the UK yet financial services are struggling to recruit top technology talent in the wake of Brexit. Right now, if you’re ambitious and hard working, studying and working in the UK is looking less and less like the way to get ahead,” said Enver. and “It will take us a decade at a minimum to clean up this mess, which is why we can’t afford another six months of uncertainty. And we can’t afford a hard Brexit. Sadly, the government has played it in such a way that we may now end up with both

Interested in attracting the right talent to your organization? We recommend the Talent Management and Leadership Development summit 2019.

Aphrodite is a creative writer and editor specialising in publishing and communications. She is passionate about undertaking projects in diverse sectors. She has written and edited copy for media as varied as social enterprise, art, fashion and education. She is at her most happy owning a project from its very conception, focusing on the client and project research in the first instance, and working closely with CEOs and Directors throughout the consultation process. Much of her work has focused on rebranding; messaging and tone of voice is one of her expertise, as is a distinctively unique writing style in my most of her creative projects. Her work is always driven by the versatility of language to galvanise image and to change perception, as it is by inspiring and being inspired by the wondrous diversity of people with whom paths she crosses cross!

Aphrodite has had a variety of high profile industry clients as a freelancer, and previously worked for a number of years as an Editor and Journalist for Prospects.ac.uk.

Aphrodite is also a professional painter.