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YTC Ventures | Technocrat’ Magazine
November 11, 2025

The UK’s jobs market is flashing red. Unemployment has climbed to 5.0% in the July-September quarter – the highest since February 2021, up from 4.8% in the prior period. This surge, driven by a cooling economy and policy headwinds, has wiped out 117,000 payrolled jobs year-over-year, with redundancies hitting 99,000 in the three months to October.

As Chancellor Rachel Reeves gears up for the November 26 budget, the question looms: Can fiscal tweaks and a fresh India trade pact stem the bleed?This isn’t just numbers – it’s livelihoods. Youth unemployment is spiking, with NEET (Not in Education, Employment, or Training) figures nearing 1 million, the highest in a decade.

Wage growth slowed to 4.8% annually, barely outpacing inflation at 3.7%, squeezing household budgets amid stagnant GDP growth of just 0.9% in H1 2025. Here’s the full breakdown: Current status, layoff trends, sector winners/losers, policy fallout, and how the UK-India FTA could reshape India’s role in the UK’s recovery.

Current Status: A Labour Market on the Brink

  • Employment Rate: Dipped to 75.0% for ages 16-64, down 0.2 points quarterly but up slightly year-on-year.
  • Unemployment: 5.0% for ages 16+, affecting 1.7 million people – a post-pandemic peak.
  • Economic Inactivity: Steady at 21.0%, but masking rises among youth and the disabled.
  • Payrolls: Fell 32,000 in September alone to 30.3 million, with private sector hiring frozen in retail and hospitality.

The Bank of England warns of further rises to 5%+ in 2026, cooling wage pressures but risking a deflationary spiral. Youth cohorts are hit hardest, prompting reviews into mental health and inactivity crises.

Overall, the market’s “stabilising” – but that’s code for stagnation, with net employment balances dropping to +13 from +21.

Layoffs in the UK: 2024-2025 Tracker

Redundancies are accelerating, up 7.6% quarterly to 99,000 by October 2024, with 2025 on track for 400,000+ total – the highest since 2020’s pandemic wave. Tech and telecoms lead the charge, but policy-driven costs are rippling across sectors. Below: Key layoffs by major announcements.

Company/OrgSectorLayoffs (2024)Layoffs (2025 YTD)Total ImpactNotes
BT GroupTelecoms10,0005,00015,000AI-driven; 55,000 target by 2030.
Salesforce (UK ops)Tech1,0005001,50010% global cut; Ireland focus.
Virgin MediaTelecoms/Media2,0001,0003,00012% workforce; restructuring.
IBM (UK)Tech5001,0001,500Low single-digit %; Q4 2025 push.
CD Projekt RedGaming/Tech01001009% cut; overstaffing.
Forbes (UK/EU ops)Media050505% global; financial miss.
Retail (Aggregate)Retail50,00020,00070,000BRC forecast; 900k by 2025.
Public Sector (CIPD)Government10,00015,00025,000NI hikes; balance to -4.
Tech Startups (Aggregate)Tech50,000178,635*228,635Global tracker; UK ~20% share.
Total (Est.)All~200,000~250,000450,000ONS/CIPD; up 5.9% YoY.

UK subset estimated. Tech alone: 178k global in 2025, with UK telecoms/media amplifying.

Booming vs. Busting: Sector Showdown

The UK’s economy is bifurcating – green tech surges while legacy sectors crumble. GDP forecasts: 1.2-1.5% growth in 2025, but unevenly distributed. London/South East lead at 1.7% GVA, while North lags.

CategoryBooming SectorsGrowth Drivers (2025)Busting SectorsDecline Factors
High-GrowthRenewables/Green Economy+3x UK avg; £120bn by 2028; high-wage jobs.Retail/Wholesale-20k payrolls; e-com shift, cost crisis.
Tech-DrivenAI/Fintech/Digital+1.6% employment; London hub.Manufacturing/Production-0.9% output; tariffs, energy costs.
ServicesHealthcare/Life SciencesPost-pandemic boom; biotech investments.Hospitality/AccommodationNI hikes; part-time cuts.
CreativeGaming/Film/MusicGlobal demand; £45bn beauty tie-in.Media/Journalism4k UK cuts; ad revenue slump.
InfrastructureConstruction/Utilities+2.1% GVA; housing push.Telecoms20k+ cuts; AI automation.

Boomers like net zero (1.1% GVA, > farming) create 3x faster jobs; busters face 5.9% layoff hikes.

Policy Impact: Tax Hikes Fuel the Fire

Labour’s 2024 budget – £25bn employer NI rise (13.8% to 15%) and NLW hike to £11.44/hr – is biting hard. CIPD surveys show hiring confidence at +13 (down from +21), with public sector balances flipping negative (-4). Redundancies per 1,000 employees: 4.5, up YoY. BoE’s high rates (4%) exacerbate, but December cuts loom as slack builds.

IFS warns further tax raids could push unemployment to 5%+ by Q4 2025, stifling growth. Youth and low-wage sectors suffer most, with 61% of 18-34s anxious. Positive: Green investments and trade deals could offset, but budget optics matter.

India-UK Pact: A Bridge to Brighter Futures?

Signed July 24, 2025, after May 6 agreement-in-principle, the FTA is a £42.6bn trade booster (2024 baseline). Tariffs slashed: 99% Indian lines, 90% UK (whisky/gin halved). Projections: +£25.5bn bilateral trade annually by 2040; UK exports to India +60% (£15.7bn).

For India: Enhanced professional mobility (visas for IT/health pros), insurance FDI to 74% (path to 100%).

Sectors: Pharma, EVs, renewables – countering US tariffs (50% on Indian goods). GHG bump: +0.8 MtCO2e UK, but green chapters mitigate. Future: Doubles trade by 2030, per Modi-Starmer; model for EU/Canada pacts. For UK’s jobs woe? Inflows in booming sectors (tech/green) could add 100k roles, offsetting layoffs – if implemented inclusively.

The Road Ahead: From Crisis to Catalyst

At 11:13 PM IST on November 11, 2025, as UK’s jobs haze thickens, the grid signals pivot.

GRAP-style bans won’t fix this – tech shields will. YTC Ventures stands ready: AI workforce reskilling for green transitions, B2B consulting for FTA compliance. The pact isn’t salvation – it’s strategy. Execute, or exhale frustration.

SEO Tags: UK unemployment rate 2025, UK layoffs 2024-2025, booming sectors UK economy, UK economic policy impact employment, India UK FTA 2025 future, GRAP jobs market, tech layoffs UK, green economy growth UK

#UKJobsCrisis #IndiaUKPact #YTCForce

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ytcventures27
Author: ytcventures27

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