Home Business NewsThe government needs to get their heads out of the sand over jobs losses

The government needs to get their heads out of the sand over jobs losses

by LLB staff reporter
18th Jul 25 9:07 am

The Federation of Small Businesses is demanding that the government need to take their heads out of the sand and urgently address Thursday figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

ONS figures shows that the unemployment rate has risen to 4.7 per cent, the number of people on payroll has dropped and wage growth has slowed.

Policy Chair of the FSB Tina McKenzie, said the figures are โ€œdisturbingโ€ which adds to โ€œa weight of evidence that if you make it more expensive and riskier to give someone a job, the result will be fewer jobs.โ€

โ€œMore people are already being locked out of opportunities, the benefits bill will rise even further, and the growth and prosperity we so desperately need will become more out of reach.

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โ€œRamping up jobs taxes, pushing through 28 new bits of employment legislation, and then on top of that mooting a hike in employer pension costs, is not a recipe for job-creation and economic growth. Innovative, ambitious and compassionate small employers, who want to grow and create good opportunities for people, are absolutely up against it, with sky-high costs of doing business and a stagnant economy.

โ€œMinisters should start basing policy-making on real-world evidence, including todayโ€™s official figures, rather than being swayed by well-intentioned, but misguided, wishful-thinkers.

โ€œNew FSB research has found that twice as many small businesses shed staff in the second quarter of 2025 (20 per cent) than increased their employee numbers (9 per cent), with similar numbers predicted for the next three months (19 per centย and 8 per centย respectively).

โ€œFor the first time in the 15-year history of FSBโ€™s quarterly Small Business Index, more small businesses (27 per cent) expect to shrink or close over the next 12 months than the number (25 per cent) which expect to expand. Thatโ€™s more than alarming for the economy and the communities up and down the UK in which these hard-working businesses operate.

โ€œSmall businesses currently provide more than half of all private sector employment โ€“ more than 16 million jobs, in every part of the country. Jeopardising that is not in the interests of workers, job-seekers or the economy.

โ€œThere is some very clear writing on the wall. The Government must, collectively, take its head out of the sand and read it. That includes improving the worst aspects of the planned employment legislation, supporting small employers to make rises in statutory sick pay affordable, and creating the conditions in which itโ€™s attractive for talented, aspirational people to start their own business.โ€

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