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Labour Market Statistics, January 2026
Analysis of the January 2026 Labour Market Statistics by IES Chief Executive, Naomi Clayton.
IES experts are available for comment and interviews. Their knowledge and views are supported by independent research and extensive experience.
IES experts are available for comment and interviews. Their knowledge and views are supported by independent research and extensive experience. Contact the Press Office at 01273 763414 or via the email below.
Featured
Analysis of the January 2026 Labour Market Statistics by IES Chief Executive, Naomi Clayton.
Featured
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has commissioned the Institute for Employment Studies, in partnership with Learning and Work Institute, to deliver evidence reviews and practical resources on key labour market issues to help inform local policymakers.
November's announcement of significant investment in employment support is welcome news, but it risks being drowned out by divisive rhetoric around ‘coasters’ who want to ‘take taxpayers for a ride’.
The labour market is continuing to cool, with vacancies now down by a quarter of a million over the last year and by sixty thousand in the most recent quarter
Today was meant to see publication of the latest labour market statistics from the Labour Force Survey. Unfortunately however, issues with the reliability of the survey mean that instead only three figures were published..
IES has signed The Smallest Things’ Employer with Heart charter, which enables the parents of premature babies to take extended parental leave.
While today’s figures see a welcome return to real pay growth, the jobs data is very weak indeed.
We are keen to hear from employers about what they need and want from the public employment service to inform our research for The Commission on the Future of Employment Support.
Today’s figures have perhaps the first signs that higher interest rates may be starting to put the brakes on the economy, with unemployment ticking up to 4%.
Today’s jobs figures are broadly positive, with the level of employment finally back to where it was on the eve of the pandemic and with working hours also returning to pre-Covid levels.
The stand-out figure in today’s data is another sharp increase in the number of people off work with long-term health conditions, up by nearly a hundred thousand in the last quarter to over 2.5 million people.
A summary of the latest activities of the IES Trials Unit.