EU worker shortages driving up London labour rates

Aaron Morby 4 years ago
Share

A shortage of EU workers is starting to drive up labour costs in London, according to a leading payroll specialist.

Mechanical and engineering tradespeople's weekly earnings top £1000
Mechanical and engineering tradespeople's weekly earnings top £1000

New payroll data for self-employed workers during shows average earnings in London increased by 4.5% to £885 per week.

Ian Anfield, managing director of employment contract services specialist Hudson Contract, said: “We are starting to see the impact of people leaving the UK ahead of the EU Settlement Scheme deadline on June 30 and not being replaced by incomers.

“First and foremost, this is affecting London, which has the highest concentration of foreign construction workers and the most transient labour market.

“The Brexit effect on labour supply is slower the further away you go from the capital and many EU workers have settled in the North of England.”

He added: “In central London, the prime housing market is growing for the first time since the start of the pandemic, a sure sign of the high spirits felt across the entire sector.”

Region May
Average
April to May
% Change
Year on Year
% Change
North East £671 -8.6% -7.8%
North West £827 -4.1% 4.0%
Yorkshire and the Humber £821 0.5% 9.0%
East Midlands £954 1.7% 17.2%
West Midlands £920 3.5% 1.4%
Wales £887 2.8% 8.7%
East of England £949 -0.3% 8.3%
London £885 4.5% 2.8%
South East £923 0.7% 5.4%
South West £863 1.9% 10.1%

The West Midlands also saw a significant rise in weekly earnings for subcontractors, increasing by 3.5% to £920 during May.

The region tends to have a larger supply of domestic tradespeople that have traditionally commanded higher earnings.

The cost increase mirrors an acute shortage of building materials in the West Midlands as a result of significant house building activity and major infrastructure projects in Birmingham including new stations for high-speed rail and facilities for the Commonwealth Games in 2022.

Anfield added: “There is shedloads of construction work about and growing pressure on the availability of both labour and materials.

“We expect some respite for construction companies with the closure of the government’s Self-Employment Income Support Scheme in September which should encourage claimants back onto sites.”

Last month, mechanical and engineering tradespeople had the strongest growth in earnings which rose 5.7% to £1,068 per week.

They were followed by joinery and plumbing contractors, whose earnings increased by 4.5% to £1,011 and £967 respectively.

 

 

Latest news

Major Building Safety Regulator shake-up to end tower delays

HSE stripped of control and top fire chiefs brought in to fast-track stalled schemes
3 hours ago

Construction comeback to outpace wider economy

Arcadis forecast fueled by spending review optimism
19 minutes ago

Hinkley trio sign Sizewell civils deal

Balfour,Bouygues and Laing O'Rourke form Civil Works Alliance for new power station
3 hours ago

£3.9bn data centre plan for Ravenscraig steelworks

Green energy to power massive new steel to silicon AI campus
4 hours ago

Breakthrough on HS2’s second longest tunnel

8.4 mile Northolt to Old Oak Common drive completes
4 hours ago

Neilcott on fast-track to debt-free employee ownership

£22.5m loan nearly paid down after big profit year
2 hours ago

TfL kicks off race for £700m Tube station upgrade

South Kensington and Elephant & Castle top the pipeline list
4 hours ago

Corbyn Plant Hire fleet goes under the hammer

Kit to be sold off by sister firm to collapsed groundworks contractor
3 hours ago

Government wields procurement stick on late payment

New rules would block slow payers from bidding on big public jobs
3 days ago

Hercules buys power line labour firm for £15.7m

Labour supply specialist snaps up Advantage NRG to tap booming electricity upgrade market
3 days ago

Universal bid to fast-track planning for theme park

Entertainment giant eyes 2026 start at Bedford site
3 days ago

Developer Breck to transform former Ibstock brick factory

Ravenhead works to become 300-home development
3 days ago

SP Energy Networks awards contracts worth £1.4bn

First round of awards under £5.4bn national electricity grid upgrade programme
4 days ago

Travelodge to convert Liverpool Street office building

Office-to-hotel conversion in City of London
3 days ago

Plans lodged for 1m sq ft City of London office

Barbican landmark building will reuse 40% of existing structure
4 days ago

PTSG acquires roofing specialist HD Sharman Group

Premier Technical Services Group expands building maintenance division
3 days ago

Balfour Beatty lands £833m carbon capture power plant job

Work to start later this year on Teesside carbon capture gas-fired power station
4 days ago

Svella agrees deal to save Cubby Construction

Solvent purchase set to save 214 jobs and protect supply chain
4 days ago

J Coffey holds line on margins despite £52m revenue slide

Pre-tax profit down 14% but firm eyes strong pipeline to bounce back
4 days ago

Consultants called up for £2.3bn NHS SBS panel reboot

Market asked for views ahead of next-gen procurement rollout
4 days ago

Hochtief launches new UK data centre division

German business model to be introduced for UK construction
5 days ago

Construction skills body launches with 100,000 worker target

Industry to work closer with Jobcentres to find new talent
4 days ago

Kier lands £42m Midlothian school and community hub

Contractor strengthens presence in Scotland with big education job
4 days ago

BESA audit blitz sees 14 specialist contractors suspended

Building engineering services trade body cracks down on standards
6 days ago

Engineers pull-off 220m HS2 viaduct slide in 3 days

Five-structure Northants sequence ends with 1,300t deck slide - video
5 days ago

Managing Director moves to advisory role at Shufflebottom

Alex Shufflebottom steps-down after acquisition by Embrace
5 days ago

JV North unveils winners of £500m housing blitz

Consortium gears up to deliver 3,000 new homes across North West
6 days ago

Partnerships builder Keepmoat names new chief executive

Ian Hoad to take reins as Tim Beale steps down after eight years
6 days ago

Ballymore to transform former Crossrail construction site

Limmo Peninsula will be new neighbourhood in East London
6 days ago

Building Safety Regulator chief to step down

Search on to find replacement for Philip White
6 days ago