United Kingdom.- The number of permanent jobs in the UK has suffered its worst fall after having withdrawn from the European Union (EU).
According to the latest report of the Confederation Employment and Recruitment (REC, its acronym in English), the number of people with permanent jobs stood at the end of July at 45.4%, which means a drop of 3.9 percentage points, from 49, 3% in June.
this fall is the faster of this indicator since 2009 when there was the international financial crisis following the collapse of US bank Lehman Brothers.
situation is because companies prefer to hire employees in the short term by ignoring the economic future of this group of countries, since they will not have the benefits of EU membership, he said spokesman REC, Kevin Green.
analysts expect the output of the European Union bring negative consequences for the UK economy. In its latest bulletin, the Bank of England estimates that the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which measures productivity growth, decrease in the second half of 2016.
fb
No comments:
Post a Comment