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Home Business News Employment shrunk by 0.4% in February as SMEs prepare for new costs

Employment shrunk by 0.4% in February as SMEs prepare for new costs

by LLB staff reporter
17th Mar 25 10:40 am

Employment continued to retract in February following the Governmentโ€™s decision to hike job taxes, a new report fromย Employment Heroย shows.

Employment Heroโ€™s SmartMatch Employment Report uses real-time data from 105,000 employees across small and medium-sized businesses with 1-500 employees in the UK.

Data from the end of February showed that employment shrunk by 0.4% across the month, following a slight growth of 0.2% in January.

On average, employment growth has decreased by 0.3% every month since October, when the hike to employer National Insurance contributions was announced. These changes will see employers pay an additional ยฃ900 in annual taxes per employee at the median wage.

Young and Welsh hit the hardest

All age groups contributed to the month-on-month decline in employment, but those aged 18-24 were disproportionately impacted, with employment falling 1.8% for this group.

While the tax hikes are likely to be a contributing factor, the Governmentโ€™s decision to eliminate the minimum wage for 18-20-year-olds is also a probable cause of the decline.

From 1 April, employers will have to pay all adults aged 21 or over the National Living Wage of ยฃ12.25, which previously only applied to those aged 23 or over. The lower minimum wage for 21-22 year olds is being eliminated.

Regionally, Wales saw the largest decline in employment with a 3.3% decrease in February – offsetting employment gains made over the last year.

Scotland and The South of England experienced the highest employment growth in February, both growing 0.9%.

Kevin Fitzgerald, UK MD of Employment Hero said, “This 0.4% contraction in employment growth is particularly concerning given its disproportionate impact on younger workers. While employers will have to pay more for these roles, the bigger challenge is that younger employees often require more training and support. Rather than replacing them, many SMEs will simply absorb the extra workload themselves, as they canโ€™t afford the additional strain.”

โ€œIf this trend continues, we could see a much more challenging job market emerging in the months ahead, particularly for younger workers trying to get their foot on the career ladder. We are already nearing one million young people not in education or employment – this will only get worse.โ€

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