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Thursday, 10th December 2009

Recession forecast to cost 100,000 Scots their jobs

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Published Date: 05 July 2009
SCOTLAND will shed more than 100,000 jobs over the course of the recession, equivalent to one in every 25 of the workforce, according to a report to be published this week.
The research, commissioned by Scottish Enterprise, the country's main economic development agency, concludes that 106,000 jobs will be lost by the end of the worst economic downturn for a generation.

The report, compiled before more than 1,000 job cuts were announced last week at Lloyds and Diageo, further warns that it will take nine years before employment in Scotland returns to its 2008 high of 2.7 million jobs.

In an interview with Scotland on Sunday today, Scottish Enterprise's new chairman Campbell Gillies warns there is "no silver bullet" to help turn the country around. But he says the government now needs to throw its weight behind home-grown success stories to help them become global players.

Yesterday, in a further sign of how the recession is affecting Britain's biggest firms, BT announced it was offering staff long-term holidays in return for pay cuts.

In Scotland, jobs agencies say many manufacturing firms are moving to a four-day week.

The report, by independent consultancy Oxford Economics, says that while Scotland's slump will not be as severe as that experienced throughout the UK this year and next, its recovery will be far slower.

The worst sector will be the country's manufacturing base. Oxford Economics believe that some 56,000 jobs will go in the sector alone in the next decade.

It says: "The (Scottish] economy is heading into perhaps its sharpest setback period since the war ... a return to jobs growth is expected from 2012 onwards, but employment levels are not expected to return to their 2008 peak until at least 2017."

It concludes: "There are forecast to be 106,000 fewer jobs in Scotland in 2011 than in 2008 as a direct result of the recession."

The biggest sector hit will be financial and business services which will lose 36,600 jobs. Retail and catering (28,500 jobs) and manufacturing (20,600 jobs) are other big casualties.

And the authors say that Scotland will fail to match UK growth over the coming decade, meaning the recovery of the jobs market will be slower. It declares: "As the economy gathers pace we expect economic growth in Scotland to fall once again behind the UK."

The findings suggest the Scottish Government will miss its central target of raising the country's growth rate to the UK level by 2011.

The publication of the report comes as the main political parties step up their campaign this week to reverse the 700 job cuts announced at Diageo's Kilmarnock factory.

Diageo has promised to consult before moving ahead with job cuts, but is also warning that the cutbacks are necessary to ensure it remains on a stable, long-term footing. It also points out that it is creating 400 new jobs in Fife, which will mitigate the 900 losses in Kilmarnock.

However, opposition parties last night called on ministers to hold an emergency summit on manufacturing, warning that the sector risked disappearing from Scotland. Labour's enterprise spokesman John Park said: "We are getting close to the critical mass in manufacturing in Scotland. We need to see an intervention from the Scottish Government."

A Scottish Enterprise spokeswoman said: "Scottish Enterprise commissioned this review to ascertain how the economic environment is impacting on Scotland's economy. The findings will play an important role in helping to inform our priorities for future investment and allow us to achieve the greatest value and economic impact. We are sharing the information with our partners across Scotland to help them understand and respond to the current economic conditions."

Experts in the agency say that there continue to be hopeful signs in the economy, including in the financial sector, which has seen groups including Virgin and Tesco Finance recently unveil new jobs in Scotland.

A spokesman for the Scottish Government said that the latest figures show Scotland is maintaining a higher employment rate, a lower unemployment rate and higher economic activity levels than the UK average.

He added: "However, no-one can doubt the seriousness of rising unemployment, the challenge it presents to our economy or the effect it has on individuals and their families."

A spokesman for the UK government said: "Since October we've put £500m into welfare to work in Scotland and £100m into the Future Jobs Fund which will deliver 15,000 jobs to ensure a generation of young people are not abandoned to unemployment as they were in the 1980s."


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1

Jock Tamson,

Scotland, Caledonia, Alba 05/07/2009 00:31:11
Is that better or worse than independence? About the same, I'd say.

Remember it well. Ravenscraig would close in an independent Scotland.

Hmmmm?
2

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 05/07/2009 01:53:44

A worrying situation with slow resolve, and our Greedy Banks still demanding grotesque 'charges', even after all the warnings, and the house of Lords hearings.
None-the-Wonder, this will put great strains on families, affected with unemployment.



3

Dumbill,

Outside 05/07/2009 02:36:40
If one in 25 jobs will be lost in the recession, that equates to an unemployment rate of 4%.
France, Spain, Ireland and the U.S. would be delighted with a rate so low. Theirs is over 9%.
Perhaps it really means that one in 25 jobs will disappear permanently.
4

,

05/07/2009 02:55:40
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5

,

05/07/2009 06:30:19
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6

The Saltire,

05/07/2009 06:40:00
That will be 100,000 new "giro monkey's" according to Ugly George's definition then.
7

Phil C,

05/07/2009 08:37:40
This must be an old forecast because the recession is about over according to 'experts' (Brown's friends in high places).
8

,

05/07/2009 08:46:27
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9

,

05/07/2009 09:00:01
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10

,

05/07/2009 10:09:42
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11

Gie's a break,

Edinburgh 05/07/2009 10:38:07
At least Goodwin can sleep easy knowing that every year he will be making a 'voluntary' contribution of £2 to each person affected. All without jeopardising his millionaire lifestyle fraudulently obtained at the expense of a national institution and the nation's economy!
12

Aldi Shopper,

Irvine 05/07/2009 10:38:08
I can remember Gordon telling us that "I feel your pain" Must be true He said it. He also said that he's saved the world so this story must be a lie. Remember Gordon always tes the truth. By the way a pig has just flown past my window.
13

Liberal for life,

Dunblane 05/07/2009 10:53:30
This is a very serious situation and at this time we need honesty, clarity and above all vision from our politicians. I have no faith in either the Westminster or the Holyrood leadership in any of the above criteria.

Yet again it seems, as with Iraq, only the Liberal Democrats have politicians who more seriously seek to spell out the truth to the public at large. By confronting reality (with the likes of Vince Cable and Nick Clegg spelling it out for us) then and only then can the public address the issues and how we can then all help to move us forward again in a common purpose.

Roll on the next general election when SNP propaganda and Tory hypocrisy will be exposed alongside New Labours legacy.
14

Mcsnagpile,

05/07/2009 11:26:17

For the new 100,000 unemployed –the state should give out wagons and horses a small grub-stake,- line them up in Central Scotland, and get them onto a wagon land stake-out race for the heelins. Plenty of vacant land up there. Head North young man.
15

Tartan Bonds,

05/07/2009 11:51:46


LOL
16

Pilrig,

Livingston 05/07/2009 12:23:38
12. You should have inserted a hyphen to connect 'Labour' and 'supporting'
17

daveserviceman,

edinburgh 05/07/2009 12:33:28
There will be more with the modernising pay for loacal authorities everyone will be taking a 60% pay cut perminantly so every employee will be claiming housing benefits and other social benefits to get a living income that should add several millions to the government debt. and as there will be less money to spend then less goods will be sold so more unemployment as stores close ect
18

Tartan Bonds,

05/07/2009 12:34:02
Pedo Pete's weight composition

Flab 60%

Thread worms 10%

Blood 10%

Mucus 10%

Others 10%

FACT
19

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 05/07/2009 12:47:41
Still feel that compulsion to vote Labour? Enjoying your giro cheque?

Think how Gordo and his mates are laughing up their sleeves at you as they retire into profitable banking and energy utility jobs and continue to drain the country of billions whilst making sure their own nests are feathered.
20

BROONISDOOMED,

PITS OF HELL 05/07/2009 16:57:46
if you havent already read this blog then do so,its an eye opener to how scotlands always shafted by london
http://iainmacwhirter2.blogspot.com/2008/06/its-scotlands-oil-no-really.html
broon couldnt give a fig about scots,but never mind,im sure his rear end will get a lot of attention from satan
as for lord mandy,hes like a 5th colomist spreading rumours and lies and getting paid for it
he reminds me of a character from lord of the rings
yes grimer wormtongue,whispering in broons ear all the lies he can muster
1979-labour gov uk was in it up to neck
2009-labour gov and were back in the brown stuff up to our necks again
21

BROONISDOOMED,

PITS OF HELL 05/07/2009 17:00:06
#14 that will be the hon george foulkes flying in to tell the labour troops gordons latest lies to spread in scotland
mandy thinks hes a magician,after he heard that the great lorenzo vannished with a poof on stage
22

Ewen Miler,

Wilts 05/07/2009 20:50:31
The ghost of 1979 returns. This time they say the recession and public finances are even worse. Only possible plus: generally, companies favour shorttime working to redundancies. So that when the recovery returns they won't be hit by capacity constraints.

Whoever wins the next election; or the Independence referendum - the next few years are likely to be tough.
23

Phil C,

05/07/2009 23:46:12
Ewen, The ghost of 1979 appeas whenever Labour win an election. They always screw the economy up for everyone. Any ar*sehole who still votes for the slimy 'socialist' party should be carted off to the recycling tip.
24

Mike S,

06/07/2009 09:07:12
Scotland was heavily dependent on financial services for jobs and the two big Scottish banks went bust. Insurance companies didn't do so well because of the stock market crash and the runaway house building programmes in the Edinburgh area and beyond stopped at this point. It is hardly suroprising thatScotland is goind to suffer a hard bout of unemployment. Thatcher wanted everyone to work for service industries but there is a danger in being less diversified. To cap it all the bailed out banks wouldn't lend to bail out struggling businesses, and tyhey used to accuse the unions of the "I'm alright Jack attitude".

 

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