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Business cutbacks and job losses

Geoff Riley

26th November 2008

The British economy is in falling into a recession and this brings about a fall in the demand for labour and a rise in unemployment.

In many of the examples I have shown below, the root cause of the labour shedding is a decline in demand in a related industry – for example a cement factory that is finally shutting down because of the severity of the slump in new house-building. Or the employees at a local newspaper in Guernsey in the Channel Island affected by the steep drop in demand for traditional forms of media advertising. Markets are inter-related and there are few businesses in the UK at the present time that can describe themselves as ‘recession proof’.

Newspapers shedding staff because of a decline in advertising revenue

Low cost airlines suspending flights from Birmingham due to a decline in demand for city breaks

Agency workers losing their jobs as car plants scale back production and mothball their factories for weeks at a time

Employees at Speedferries facing unemployment as their business falls into administration and fails to find a buyer

Dockers face redundancy as a slump in imports and exports hits port businesses

A slump in sales causes over a thousand workers to lose their jobs at Yell.com

The downturn in construction and high energy costs leads to job losses at a Cambridgeshire cement factory

It is worth reading through some of these stories and considering the negative multiplier effects on the local economies. How many of those who are made redundant will find fresh employment in the current economic climate?

Geoff Riley

Geoff Riley FRSA has been teaching Economics for over thirty years. He has over twenty years experience as Head of Economics at leading schools. He writes extensively and is a contributor and presenter on CPD conferences in the UK and overseas.

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