Skip to main content

Job Creation

Volume 111: debated on Tuesday 3 March 1987

The text on this page has been created from Hansard archive content, it may contain typographical errors.

22.

asked the Paymaster General how many and what type of new jobs have been created since 1983.

There are no figures for job gains and job losses.Between March 1983 and September 1986, the latest date for which figures are available, the civilian employed labour force (the sum of employees in employment and the self-employed) in Great Britain has changed as shown in the table, which presents estimates which are not adjusted for seasonal variation.

Changes in the size of the civilian employed labour force in Great Britain—March 1983 to September 1986

Thousands1

Agriculture, forestry and fishing [0]+9
Metal goods, engineering, vehicles [3]-231
Other production industries [1, 2, 4]-125
Construction [5]+61
Distribution, hotels, catering, repairs [6]+544
Transport and communication [7]+21
Banking, finance, insurance etc [8]+501
Other services [9]+535
Total+1,315

1 Not seasonally adjusted.

Numbers in brackets denote divisions of the standard industrial classification 1980.

If adjusted for seasonal variation the total increase becomes 1,128,000.

37.

asked the Paymaster General if he will list the proportion in each region of new jobs created since 1983.

There are no figures for job gains and job losses.Between September 1983 and September 1986 (the latest date for which figures are available), the civilian employed labour force in the regions of Great Britain changed as shown in the table:

ChangePercentage change
South East443,0006
East Anglia105,00013
South West96,0005
West Midlands96,0004
East Midlands74,0005
Yorkshire and Humberside68,0003
North West17,0001
North43,0004
Wales-2,000
Scotland12,0001

77.

asked the Paymaster General what percentage of the total unemployed are aged 25 years or less; and what initiatives the Government are pursuing in order to provide full-time employment at average rates of pay for those affected.

On 8 January 1987, 34·4 per cent. of unemployed claimants in the United Kingdom were aged under 25 years. All of the employment, training and enterprise measures run by my Department and the Manpower Services Commission are part of a wider strategy for encouraging enterprise and employment.